Stanley J Alexander, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1505 S Baldwin Ave, Suite A, Arcadia, CA 91007 Phone: 626-446-1972 |
Emy Caitlin Chen, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 488 E Santa Clara St, 104, Arcadia, CA 91006 Phone: 626-357-6808 |
Dr. Massoud Soleimani, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 450 E Huntington Dr, Arcadia, CA 91006 Phone: 626-462-1884 Fax: 626-445-1542 |
Dr. Soon Min Tan, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 488 E Santa Clara St, Suite 104, Arcadia, CA 91006 Phone: 626-357-6808 Fax: 626-357-6290 |
News Archive
Success in soccer sometimes comes with "bending it like Beckham." Success in cellular fusion - as occurs at the moment of conception and when nerve cells exchange neurotransmitters - requires that a membrane be bent before the merging process can begin, University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have shown.
Thanks to a certain protein, rhesus monkeys are resistant to HIV. Known as TRIM5, the protein prevents the HI virus from multiplying once it has entered the cell. Researchers from the universities of Geneva and Zurich have now discovered the protein's mechanism, as they report in Nature. This also opens up new prospects for fighting HIV in humans.
Millions of people have contracted Zika and chikungunya virus infections since the outbreaks that have been striking Latin America since 2013. Particularly Zika-related malformations in newborns warrant reliable diagnostics.
Researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery have identified a potential new therapeutic target that could be used to treat inflammatory disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis.
A new technique for sampling and testing cells from Barrett's esophagus (BE) patients could result in earlier and easier identification of patients whose disease has progressed toward cancer or whose disease is at high risk of progressing toward cancer, according to a collaborative study by investigators at Case Western Reserve University and Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center (JHKCC).
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