Dr. Christy Auburn Alley, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 234 Keller Park Blvd, Tuscumbia, AL 35674 Phone: 256-381-6963 Fax: 256-381-6018 |
Dr. Srihari Das Kanuru, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 234 Keller Park Blvd, Tuscumbia, AL 35674 Phone: 256-386-4300 Fax: 256-314-4472 |
Adrienne A. Shuler, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 234 Keller Park Blvd, Tuscumbia, AL 35674 Phone: 256-381-6963 Fax: 256-381-6018 |
News Archive
"Persistent cough in underweight patients with diabetes warrants screening for active tuberculosis." This is the message in the editorial of the December 2019 issue of the International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, based on findings from a Singapore-based study that have reported that patients with diabetes and who were also underweight had an eight-fold increase in their risk of contracting active TB, compared to obese individuals without diabetes.
BioMedReports, the news portal which covers Wall Street's biomedical sector and delivers financial and investment intelligence to a community of highly informed investors, was given an exclusive tour of CEL-SCI Corporation's, new, state-of-the-art manufacturing facility near Baltimore, MD where the potentially ground breaking cancer immunotherapy treatment, Multikine, will be manufactured to support an upcoming Phase III clinical trial.
When health officials find the water quality is unsafe for swimming at Lake Michigan beaches, warnings are quickly posted. But those who pleasure boat, canoe, kayak or fish along the Chicago and Calumet river systems don't have the protection of environmental standards.
Fetal growth is used as a marker of health and well-being in unborn babies as well as children. But, the tools that are currently available to differentiate between a small, healthy fetus and a fetus that is small due to pathologic causes have significant limitations. What if they were improved. Would it save the health care system resources spent monitoring women who might need medical intervention because their fetuses might just be small and healthy. Would it help some women avoid the anxiety such intervention brings.
Researchers have shown that a cheap and easy to use drug that stops bleeding may save up to 100,000 lives each year from injuries associated with road accidents and violence. The study was published this Tuesday in the acclaimed international journal The Lancet and was conducted by doctors at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
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