Robert J Jackson, M.D. Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 23961 Calle De La Magdalena, 504, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Phone: 949-588-5800 Fax: 949-380-3344 |
Haley Stauber, Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 23961 Calle De La Magdalena Ste 405, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Phone: 949-588-5800 |
Dr. Jason A Liauw, M.D. Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 23961 Calle De La Magdalena Ste 405, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Phone: 949-588-5800 Fax: 949-380-3345 |
Farzad Massoudi, M.D. Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 23961 Calle De La Magdalena Ste 405, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Phone: 949-588-5800 Fax: 949-380-3344 |
Brian Hwang, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 23961 Calle De La Magdalena Ste 405, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Phone: 610-357-5324 |
Dr. Robert Frank Wayner, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 23961 Calle De La Magdalena, Ste 300, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Phone: 949-837-1891 Fax: 949-830-4061 |
News Archive
Hallmarks of autism are characteristic behaviors - repetitive motions, problems interacting with others, impaired communication abilities - that occur in widely different combinations and degrees of severity among those who have the condition.
The analysis by researchers from Spain and Peru reveals that high altitude confers significant protection from coronavirus disease (COVID-19) infection and death – independent of the distance from the pandemic epicenter, population density, or poverty levels. The study is currently available on the medRxiv preprint server.
Four months of multi-drug therapy that included rifapentine and moxifloxacin treated active tuberculosis (TB) as effectively as the standard six-month regimen in a multinational study, cutting treatment time by a third.
An experimental drug that acts in a novel way to lower cholesterol proved even more effective than statins and had few undesirable side effects, newly released data shows. The drug acts by modifying the way cholesterol levels are naturally controlled. A protein produced in the liver helps limit the amount of LDL, or "bad" cholesterol, that liver cells can remove from the bloodstream. The new drug, called REGN727, is a monoclonal antibody, made in a laboratory, that blocks the action of that protein.
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