Adeola Adelayo, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 625 N Plaza Dr, Apache Junction, AZ 85120 Phone: 480-983-0065 Fax: 480-671-4541 |
Fred Barnett Lipovitch, MD Psychiatry & Neurology - Addiction Psychiatry Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 625 N Plaza Dr, Apache Junction, AZ 85120 Phone: 480-983-0065 |
Dr. Michael Howard Stumpf, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 625 N Plaza Dr, Apache Junction, AZ 85120 Phone: 480-983-0065 Fax: 480-671-4541 |
Larry J Cowley, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 150 N Ocotillo Dr, Apache Junction, AZ 85220 Phone: 480-983-0571 Fax: 480-983-0891 |
Hoda E. Hannallah, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 625 N Plaza Dr, Apache Junction, AZ 85120 Phone: 480-983-0065 Fax: 480-288-5339 |
Dr. Arthur Y Chou, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 625 N Plaza Dr, Apache Junction, AZ 85120 Phone: 480-487-2373 Fax: 480-983-3368 |
News Archive
The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) is awarding the 2007 Potamkin Prize to Richard Mayeux, MD, MSc, Fellow of the AAN and co-director of the Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's and the Aging Brain, Columbia University Medical Center in New York, for his research related to Alzheimer's disease.
In diseases such as multiple sclerosis, cells of the immune system infiltrate the brain tissue, where they cause immense damage. For many years, it was an enigma as to how these cells can escape from the bloodstream. This is no trivial feat, given that specialized blood vessels act as a barrier between the nervous system and the bloodstream.
Bariatric weight-loss surgery may sound dangerous and complicated, but a Geisinger physician warns that the real danger may be a life of obesity.
National surveys in Zimbabwe, Malawi, and Zambia reveal exceptional progress against HIV, with decreasing rates of new infection, stable numbers of people living with HIV, and more than half of all those living with HIV showing viral suppression through use of antiretroviral medication. For those on antiretroviral medication, viral suppression is close to 90 percent.
Children exposed to cocaine in the womb face serious consequences from the drug, but fortunately not in certain critical physical and cognitive areas as previously believed, according to a new comprehensive review of research on the subject from scientists at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. When a pregnant woman uses cocaine, it can interrupt the flow of nutrients and oxygen to the baby, putting such children at risk for premature birth, low birth weight and many other problems.
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