Dr. Kenneth A Whittaker, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 506 N Villa Rd, Newberg, OR 97132 Phone: 503-554-0036 Fax: 503-538-9257 |
Dr. Ronald Eugene Culver, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 308 Villa Rd, Suite 116, Newberg, OR 97132 Phone: 503-538-7407 Fax: 503-537-0640 |
Dr. Shannon S. Brigman, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 506 N Villa Rd, Newberg, OR 97132 Phone: 503-554-0036 Fax: 503-538-9257 |
Kari Lyn Smart, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 700 N Deborah Rd Ste 150, Newberg, OR 97132 Phone: 503-554-0549 |
News Archive
An investigation into unpublished stroke research data has revealed that 19.6% of completed clinical trials, which could potentially influence patient care, are not published in full. Researchers writing in BioMed Central's open access journal Trials describe how these unpublished studies included more than 16,000 participants and tested 89 different interventions.
Aileron Therapeutics, a biopharmaceutical company leading the development of a new class of drugs called Stapled Peptides, announced today that its collaborators, James E. Bradner, MD of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, and Gregory L. Verdine, PhD, Professor of Chemistry at Harvard University, published research in Nature entitled, "Direct Inhibition of the Notch Transcription Factor Complex." Results presented in the paper showed that Stapled Peptides can potently and directly inhibit the transcription factor Notch, an oncogene implicated in cancer cell proliferation and survival.
In a study of 588 patients who attended an outpatient headache clinic, more frequent migraines were experienced by participants with symptoms of anxiety and depression. In the Headache study, poor sleep quality was also found to be an independent predictor of more severe depression and anxiety symptoms.
In the healthy rat, prolonged exposure to carbon monoxide (CO) under conditions that mimic urban pollution leads to changes to cardiac morphology and function. Compensatory mechanisms develop in these animals to sustain normal cardiac activity, but they become more vulnerable to heart disease.
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