Mrs. Heather D Lambert, WHNP, FNP, BC Nurse Practitioner - Women's Health Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 507 Gordonsville Hwy, Suite 203, Gordonsville, TN 38563 Phone: 615-735-8008 Fax: 615-735-0008 |
Anna Catherine Sircy, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 8 New Middleton Hwy, Gordonsville, TN 38563 Phone: 615-735-8008 |
Kimberly D Gregory, MSN, FNP-BC Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 8 New Middleton Hwy, Ste A, Gordonsville, TN 38563 Phone: 615-735-8008 |
News Archive
Scientists and engineers will face a host of obstacles over the next decade in providing clean water to millions of people caught up in a water shortage crisis, a panel of scientists and engineers said today at a briefing at the Broadcast Center of the National Press Building on the Final Report on the American Chemical Society's Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions.
Mice with glowing green hearts have yielded the latest clue in the search for molecules involved in structural heart disease. Vanderbilt University Medical Center investigators found that blocking the activity of a single protein, called CaM kinase, in the mouse heart protects against the damaging effects of a heart attack.
A program that provided individually tailored lifestyle recommendations for patients undergoing screening for colorectal cancer helped encourage healthy behavior, according to results published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
New findings by UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers show that a byproduct of cholesterol metabolism interferes with the beneficial effects estrogen has on the cardiovascular system, providing a better understanding of the interplay between cholesterol and estrogen in heart disease.
New research published in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's journal Emerging Infectious Diseases has confirmed the emergence of a new SARS-CoV-2 variant called HMN.19B from the viral clade 19B in France. The 19B viral clade — which includes the D614G variant — was prevalent in late 2019 but had since been rarely observed since early 2020 because of newer viral clades.
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