Michael Alexander Benfield, PA Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation - Sports Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1315 Jesse Jewell Pkwy Ne Ste 300, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 770-848-6190 |
Usman Choudhry, DO Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1250 Jesse Jewell Pkwy Se, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 765-935-8866 |
Sook Kyung Yoon, MD Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 655 Jesse Jewell Pkwy Se Ste B, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 678-207-4500 Fax: 770-536-0383 |
Holmes Baker Marchman, MD Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 655 Jesse Jewell Pkwy Se, Suite B, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 770-536-6300 Fax: 770-536-6006 |
News Archive
Alsace BioValley, a French competitive health cluster dedicated to therapeutic innovation and CQDM (Québec Consortium for Drug Discovery) sign in Paris today an agreement on a bilateral partnership for the benefit of Alsatian and Quebec research centers and industries in the life sciences and health sector.
A compendium of articles in the Journal of Neurosurgery (JNS) provides evidence that specialty medical journals are not only an invaluable resource to physicians and researchers, but to the media and public. Clinical and basic science papers do not have to be published in large, high-impact publications to garner attention, and in fact when it comes to specialized areas of medicine such as neurosurgery, publications devoted to the subspecialty produce many citation classics. "Citation classic" is a term given to articles that have been cited more than 400 times.
The more gray matter you have in the decision-making, thought-processing part of your brain, the better your ability to evaluate rewards and consequences. That may seem like an obvious conclusion, but a new study conducted at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory is the first to show this link between structure and function in healthy people - and the impairment of both structure and function in people addicted to cocaine.
It's long been known that cancer cells eat a lot of sugar to stay alive. In fact, where normal, noncancerous cells generate energy from using some sugar and a lot of oxygen, cancerous cells use virtually no oxygen and a lot of sugar. Many genes have been implicated in this process and now, reporting in the May 27 issue of Cell, researchers at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have discovered that this so-called Warburg effect is controlled.
› Verified 6 days ago