Dr. Rajesh K Pandey, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 784 Franklin Ave, Ste 250, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 844-777-0910 Fax: 201-560-0712 |
Dr. Irina Raklyar, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 784 Franklin Ave, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 844-777-0910 Fax: 201-560-0712 |
Dr. David Brand Sutter, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 638 Summit Ave, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 201-848-1731 |
Boris G Chusid, M.D. Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 700 High Woods Dr, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 201-289-1121 Fax: 201-560-1695 |
Dr. Alan Zalkowitz, M.D. Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 784 Franklin Ave Ste 250, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 844-777-0910 Fax: 201-560-0712 |
Dr. David E Wertheimer, MD Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 801 Franklin Avenue, Suite 2, Seond Floor, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 201-953-4923 |
Betty Keller, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Optimal Wellness / Dr. Betty Keller, 817 Peach Tree Lane, Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417 Phone: 201-693-7555 Fax: 201-848-1464 |
News Archive
A new report, involving the University of Leicester, has called for greater understanding of how checklists can be used to improve safety. The report has been described as "counter-revolutionary" and providing a "a long overdue and desperately needed reality check for checklists in medicine" by Faculty of 1000 Medicine.
Yale researchers have taken the first critical steps in unraveling the mysteries of brain aneurysms, the often fatal rupturing of blood vessels that afflicts 500,000 people worldwide each year and nearly killed Vice President-elect Joseph Biden two decades ago.
While the crack cocaine epidemic peaked in the late 1980's, its effects are still causing harm to an estimated 3 million teenagers and young adults exposed to the stimulant in the womb.
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine have successfully edited the genome of human- induced pluripotent stem cells, making possible the future development of patient-specific stem cell therapies. Reporting this week in Cell Stem Cell, the team altered a gene responsible for causing the rare blood disease paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, or PNH, establishing for the first time a useful system to learn more about the disease.
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