Lindsay Jane Mastrine, DO Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 600 Somerset Ave, Windber, PA 15963 Phone: 814-467-3176 Fax: 814-467-3177 |
Dr. Reid Gentile, D.O. Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 600 Somerset Ave, Windber, PA 15963 Phone: 814-467-3176 Fax: 814-467-3177 |
Amy Anderson, Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 600 Somerset Ave, Windber, PA 15963 Phone: 814-467-3176 |
Pradeep K Kulkarni, MD Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 600 Somerset Ave, Windber, PA 15963 Phone: 814-467-3176 Fax: 814-467-3177 |
News Archive
The drug loperamide is widely used as a treatment for diarrhoea in adults, but most authorities, including the World Health Organization recommend that it should not be given to young children.
A University of Cincinnati (UC) cancer biology team reports breakthrough findings about specific cellular mechanisms that may help overcome endocrine (hormone) therapy-resistance in patients with estrogen-positive breast cancers, combating a widespread problem in effective medical management of the disease.
Researchers at Stevens Institute of Technology and colleagues have designed and developed a new class of molecules that use a never-before-known mechanism that may halt or destroy breast cancer tumors, particularly for patients with drug-resistant or dangerously metastatic stages of the disease.
You've heard of on-demand TV, now imagine on-demand medical diagnosis - anytime, anywhere in the world. Scientists at GE Global Research, the technology development arm of the General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE), are working with a team based at the University of Washington to develop a new medical device, the size of a pack of playing cards, that can detect infectious disease by way of a simple nasal swab, in less than an hour.
Scientists are warning that listening to music through earphones, at high volumes, can cause permanent hearing damage - they say noise-induced hearing damage above 80-85 decibels is a known phenomenon and such damage can be prevented to a large extent by reducing the noise exposure levels and duration.
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