William Louis Wardell, DO Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-7777 |
Dr. Russell John Striff, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-888-5858 Fax: 570-882-3007 |
Dr. Mason Scott Stilwell, MD Orthopaedic Surgery - Adult Reconstructive Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-2841 Fax: 570-887-2079 |
Dr. Wade Travis Gordon, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-2841 Fax: 570-887-2364 |
Dr. Brett Auerbach, D.O. Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-2841 Fax: 570-887-2079 |
Cathryn Jo Kinsman, PA Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-2180 Fax: 570-887-2364 |
Dr. Robert Edward Cohen, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-888-5858 Fax: 570-887-2079 |
Joseph Young Choi, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-888-5858 Fax: 570-887-2079 |
Dr. Paul Adrien Suarez, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-888-5858 |
Abraham T Appleton, MD Orthopaedic Surgery - Orthopaedic Trauma Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-2841 Fax: 570-887-2079 |
Dr. Daniel Lim Tayag, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1 Guthrie Sq, Sayre, PA 18840 Phone: 570-887-2841 Fax: 570-887-2364 |
News Archive
Dendrites, the branch-like projections of neurons, were once thought to be passive wiring in the brain. But now researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have shown that these dendrites do more than relay information from one neuron to the next.
Bacteria can swim, propelling themselves through fluids using a whip-like extension called a flaggella. They can also walk, strolling along solid surfaces using little fibrous legs called pili. It is this motility that enable some pathogenic bacteria to establish the infections - such as meningitis - that cause their human hosts to get sick or even die.
Researchers at The Ontario Institute for Cancer Research and University Health Network, have identified a new DNA-based test that could be used to better predict how prostate cancer patients will respond to treatment and to prevent relapse.
"As World AIDS Day 2012 approaches, it is a timely opportunity to reflect on what we learned at this year's International AIDS Conference" and recognize "the United States, through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), has been a remarkable vehicle in this fight, employing sound science to offer the highest quality interventions and treatment," Nils Daulaire, director of the Office of Global Affairs at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), writes in the AIDS.gov blog.
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