Dr. Cecilia Kalijman Karol, MD Psychiatry & Neurology - Addiction Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1055 River Rd, Apt.511 S., Edgewater, NJ 07020 Phone: 201-886-2827 |
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Dr. Lydia Shajenko, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Neurology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 725 River Rd Ste 55, Edgewater, NJ 07020 Phone: 646-712-1635 Fax: 866-267-8173 |
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Researchers studying strategies to develop a non-hormonal approach to male contraception have reached an important milestone in their work, discovering a way to produce a key enzyme found only in sperm in sufficient quantities that they can begin designing drugs to stop the sperm from swimming to the egg.
They have been around since the dawn of time and are a model of evolutionary success: viruses. Viruses are extremely adaptable but they have a problem: They cannot reproduce, so they smuggle their genes into suitable host cells. In the case of some viruses, the viral DNA has to enter the cell nucleus to reproduce. This has been known for almost 50 years.
A new research paper posted to the medRxiv* preprint server describes the changes in genomic sequence observed during the course of infection in a patient on the drug tacrolimus, along with steroids, both potent immunosuppressants, and who also received convalescent plasma treatment. These mutations were observed to occur within three weeks from infection.
Probiotics are one of the fastest growing areas for research as well as one of the valued members in the food industry. These are healthy bacteria or friendly bacteria that are added to yogurts, drinks, and baby food in order to colonize out gut when we are taking antibiotics or are down with an intestinal infection.
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