Lindsey Howell Adams, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2115 14th St Ste 100, Auburn, NE 68305 Phone: 402-274-4993 Fax: 402-274-4905 |
Courtney Kreifels, PA Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2115 14th St Ste 100, Auburn, NE 68305 Phone: 402-274-4993 |
Mr. Nathan Christopher Strasser, PA Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2115 14th St Ste 100, Auburn, NE 68305 Phone: 402-274-4993 Fax: 402-274-4905 |
News Archive
Cancers are due to genetic aberrations in certain cells that gain the ability to divide indefinitely. This proliferation of sick cells generates tumors, which gradually invade healthy tissue. Therefore, current therapies essentially seek to destroy cancer cells to stop their proliferation. Through high-throughput genetic sequencing of glioblastoma cells, one of the most deadly brain tumors, a team of geneticists from the University of Geneva's (UNIGE) Faculty of Medicine discovered that some of these mutations are caused by supplemental extrachromosomal DNA fragments, called double minutes, which enable cancer cells to better adapt to their environment and therefore better resist to treatments meant to destroy them.
A record 40 percent of American women of childbearing age reported taking a daily multivitamin containing folic acid in 2004, up from 32 percent last year and the highest level since the March of Dimes began surveying women in the 1990s, according to the organization's latest survey, which was published today in Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report.
Writers, editors, and producers with an interest in contemporary surgical topics are invited to apply for press credentials to cover the 2014 Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons-one of the largest international meetings of surgeons in the world.
Consumers in the United States have been issued yet another warning about contaminated food.
According to a new study about one in five young adults may have high blood pressure. The researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill analyzed blood pressure data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, called Add Health, and compared it with data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, commonly referred to as NHANES. They focused specifically on the information about adults age 24 to 32.
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