Sarah Elizabeth Grattan Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1028 Main St, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-276-5248 |
Troy Cilone, LPA Psychologist - Cognitive & Behavioral Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1028 Main St, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-647-2477 |
Dr. Pamela Burns Andrews, ED.D. Psychologist - Counseling Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 543 Main St, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-633-2025 Fax: 502-633-3634 |
Dr. Amy B Gonshak, PH.D. Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4031 Firestone Way, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-523-1863 |
Dr. James William Erikson, PH.D. Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6071 Edgemont Way, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 812-569-9326 |
Glenn Truman Harris, B.A. Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 250 Alpine Dr, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-633-5683 |
Misti Powell Edelen, MED Psychologist - Counseling Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1028 Main St, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-647-2477 |
Leslie Purvis Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 250 Alpine Dr, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-589-8600 Fax: 502-589-8771 |
Stephanie Parker Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 250 Alpine Dr, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-589-1100 Fax: 502-589-8771 |
Dr. Michael Edward Whitten, PH.D. Psychologist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1028 Main St, Shelbyville, KY 40065 Phone: 502-647-2477 Fax: 502-371-0890 |
News Archive
What's in a name? Doctors have found that the name of the drug you are prescribed significantly influences how the patient sees the treatment.
The use of flow-diverting stents to treat intracranial aneurysms appears safe and highly successful. Recently, however, there have been reports of ischemic complications occurring in brain territories supplied by the parent artery in which the stent is placed and in brain regions fed by small arterial branches whose ostia are covered by the stent.
An international consortium of genome research institutes and investigators, including Jackson Laboratory Staff Scientists Carol J. Bult, Ph.D., and Martin Ringwald, Ph.D., has reported significant new breakthroughs in understanding how the genes in mammals are controlled.
Under normal conditions, the CHD4 protein is one of the good guys: it stops cells from transcribing faulty DNA, thereby eliminating potential mutation. But in colon cancer and perhaps other kinds of cancer as well, it appears that this protein becomes a kind of double agent, working for the enemy.
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