Vilma E Quijada, MD Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 24920 104th Ave Se, Kent, WA 98030 Phone: 425-690-3544 Fax: 425-690-9444 |
Edward Dy, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 23213 Pacific Hwy S, Kent, WA 98032 Phone: 206-870-8880 Fax: 206-520-1499 |
Frank P S Fung, MD Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 24920 104th Ave Se, Kent, WA 98030 Phone: 425-690-3544 Fax: 425-690-9444 |
Anusha Iyer, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 24920 104th Ave Se, Kent, WA 98030 Phone: 425-690-3420 Fax: 425-690-9420 |
Syed Adnan Mustafa, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 233 2nd Ave S, Kent, WA 98032 Phone: 206-436-6380 Fax: 206-436-6385 |
Dr. Cara A Oliver, MD Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 24920 104th Ave Se, Kent, WA 98030 Phone: 253-395-1944 Fax: 253-520-3242 |
News Archive
Cancer arises when cells lose control. Deciphering the "blueprint" of cancer cells - outlining how cancer cells hijack specific pathways for uncontrolled proliferation - will lead to more efficient ways to fight it.
Researchers from Brown University have developed a new biochip sensor that can selectively measure concentrations of glucose in a complex solution similar to human saliva. The advance is an important step toward a device that would enable people with diabetes to test their glucose levels without drawing blood.
Building on a long-standing commitment to helping people before, during and after a cancer diagnosis, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company has broadened its life insurance underwriting guidelines for prostate cancer survivors.
Dairy products contain a wide variety of lipids, both triglycerides and polar lipids, the latter being specific lipids that naturally stabilize fat droplets and are notably found in cream and buttermilk.
Efforts to stem the impact of COVID-19 in low to middle income countries could be creating a health time bomb in their slum communities by deepening existing inequalities, according to an international team of health researchers led by the University of Warwick.
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