Stevie Elise Theoharidis, PT, DPT Physical Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 139 Benosche Road, The Center For Discovery, Harris, NY 12742 Phone: 845-794-1400 Fax: 845-707-8115 |
Lisa Beth Gradziel, PT Physical Therapist Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 139 Benmosche Road, The Center For Discovery, Harris, NY 12742 Phone: 845-794-1400 Fax: 845-707-8115 |
Patricia Catherine Longinott, PT, DPT, C/NDT Physical Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Benmosche Road, Harris, NY 12742 Phone: 845-707-8423 Fax: 845-707-8115 |
Ulysses Velacha, PT, DPT Physical Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 68 Harris Bushville Rd, Harris, NY 12742 Phone: 845-794-3300 |
News Archive
An analysis of five families has revealed a previously unknown genetic immunodeficiency, says an international team led by researchers from Boston Children's Hospital. The condition, linked to mutations in a gene called DOCK2, deactivates many features of the immune system and leaves affected children open to a unique pattern of aggressive, potentially fatal infections early in life.
pSivida Corp., a leader in developing sustained release, drug delivery products for treatment of back-of-the-eye diseases, today announced that the United Kingdom's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence issued draft guidance recommending ILUVIEN for the treatment of pseudophakic patients (those who have undergone prior cataract surgery) with chronic diabetic macular edema considered insufficiently responsive to available therapies.
Walk into any emergency department complaining of chest pain and you are likely to have blood drawn. Within hours it should be clear whether you've had a heart attack, based on enzyme levels in your blood and whether those levels reveal the tissue damage normally associated with a heart attack or other major cardiac event.
Research carried out in two distinct communities in Colombia illustrates how coevolution between humans and bacteria can affect a person's risk of disease. Working with colleagues in Columbia and the U.S., Scott Williams, PhD, a professor of genetics at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, and his graduate student Nuri Kodaman discovered that the risk of developing gastric cancer depends heavily on both the ancestry of the person and the ancestry of Helicobacter pylori with which that person is infected.
› Verified 1 days ago