Robert J Toltzis, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1400 Grand Ave, Newport, KY 41071 Phone: 859-905-3073 Fax: 859-441-1460 |
Donald A Saelinger, M.D. Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 17 E. Sixth St, Newport, KY 41017 Phone: 859-431-8285 Fax: 859-431-8286 |
Dr. Kami Attarhaye Tehrani, D.O. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1400 Grand Ave, Newport, KY 41071 Phone: 859-905-3073 Fax: 859-441-1460 |
Dr. Mark Allen Schroer, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 17 East Sixth Street, Newport, KY 41071 Phone: 859-431-8285 Fax: 859-431-8286 |
Dr. Darek Sanford, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1400 Grand Avenue, Newport, KY 41071 Phone: 859-905-3073 Fax: 859-441-1460 |
News Archive
A large, multicenter study found that the Breast Imaging and Reporting Data Systems (BI-RADS) terminology used by radiologists to classify breast imaging results is useful in predicting malignancy in breast lesions detected with MRI. Results of the study are published online in the journal Radiology.
Low-income mothers and their first-born children who received home visits from nurses were less likely to die from preventable causes during a two-decade period studied by a University of Colorado School of Medicine professor, according to a report published in JAMA Pediatrics - a leading, peer-reviewed journal of the American Medical Association.
Osteomyelitis - a debilitating bone infection most frequently caused by Staphylococcus aureus ("staph") bacteria - is particularly challenging to treat.
You're in the supermarket eyeing a basket of sweet, juicy plums. You reach for the conventionally grown stone fruit, then decide to spring the extra $1/pound for its organic cousin. You figure you've just made the healthier decision by choosing the organic product - but new findings from Stanford University cast some doubt on your thinking.
Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is diagnosed in about 700,000 people in the United States every year. Commonly contributing to SCC is a protein called DNp63a - it goes abnormally high and the ability of a patient's body to kill cancer cells goes abnormally low. In many cases of SCC, it's just that simple. And science thought the function of DNp63a was simple, as well: the tumor suppressor gene p53 is responsible for recognizing and killing cancer cells, and in SCC, it's usually inactivated. It looked like high DNp63a repressed p53, made SCC.
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