Dr. James Timothy Aldridge, D.O. Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1400 E 9th St, Rochester, IN 46975 Phone: 574-223-2020 Fax: 574-223-5847 |
Krishnan R Rajagopal, MD Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1430 E 9th St, Rochester, IN 46975 Phone: 574-223-9525 Fax: 574-223-9521 |
Dr. Julius Salazar Sitjar, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2671 Ft Wayne Rd, Rochester, IN 46975 Phone: 574-223-3627 Fax: 574-223-6337 |
News Archive
BioCryst Pharmaceuticals has announced that investigators at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, reported favorable results evaluating peramivir treatment in an animal model of influenza using a highly virulent strain of H5N1 virus (an avian influenza strain that had caused fatal human infection in Viet Nam).
The lead author of the widely-recognized AMSSM Position Statement Concussion in Sport that has become the standard of care resource for sports medicine physicians caring for concussion, Kim Harmon, MD, is representing the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine at the White House Healthy Kids & Safe Sports Concussion Summit today (Thursday, May 29) in Washington, D.C. along with AMSSM President Chris Madden, MD and Executive Director Jim Griffith, MBA, CAE.
Researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have discovered a previously unknown mechanism which helps intestinal bacteria to affect the formation of blood vessels. The results, which are presented in Nature, may provide future treatments of intestinal diseases and obesity.
The number of Americans who report they have coronary heart disease – which includes heart attack and angina (chest pain) – continues to decline but rates vary widely from state to state and by race and ethnicity, according to a new report published today in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
African-Americans and Africans who swapped their typical diets for just two weeks similarly exchanged their respective risks of colon cancer as reflected by alterations of their gut bacteria, according to an international study led by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine published online today in Nature Communications.
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