Brian Edward Koch, MD Orthopaedic Surgery - Sports Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 270 E Main St Ste 300, Gallatin, TN 37066 Phone: 615-675-2000 Fax: 615-278-1672 |
John R Weaver, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 300 Steam Plant Rd., Suite 300, Gallatin, TN 37066 Phone: 615-461-7335 Fax: 615-449-4835 |
Paul W. Grutter, MD Orthopaedic Surgery - Sports Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 270 E Main St Ste 300, Gallatin, TN 37066 Phone: 615-278-1673 Fax: 615-278-1672 |
Dr. Benjamin P. Debelak, D.O. Orthopaedic Surgery - Sports Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 253 W Main St, Gallatin, TN 37066 Phone: 615-826-7171 |
Dr. Kelly S Barry, MD Orthopaedic Surgery - Adult Reconstructive Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 300 Steam Plant Rd Ste 300, Gallatin, TN 37066 Phone: 615-328-3740 |
News Archive
​Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center and colleagues have investigated the safety, efficacy and the maximum tolerated dose of pomalidomide for patients with multiple myeloma who have disease relapsed after treatments with other drugs, such as bortezomib and lenalidomide.
A professor at the University of Southampton working with HelpAge International and an international expert group has developed the Global AgeWatch Index to help highlight the varying quality of life and wellbeing that older people experience in countries around the world
The cause of type 1 diabetes remains unknown. Several studies using immunohistochemistry (IHC) have independently reported hyperexpression of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I on pancreatic islet cells in young patients with recent-onset type 1 diabetes. Investigators have therefore suggested that HLA hyperexpression may be an important first step in the development of type 1 diabetes.
CureSearch for Children's Cancer has awarded a $20,000 grant to Beaumont Children's Hospital to help fund therapeutic clinical trials.
Working with lab cultures and mice, Johns Hopkins scientists have found that a strain of the common gut pathogen Bacteroides fragilis causes colon inflammation and increases activity of a gene called spermine oxidase (SMO) in the intestine.
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