Delaney Dogan, Urology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 26 Nesbitt Rd Ste 100, New Castle, PA 16105 Phone: 724-658-7790 |
Dr. William John Pommersheim, M.D. Urology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2067 Nashua Rd, New Castle, PA 16105 Phone: 724-654-4888 |
Dr. Suresh P Amina, MD Urology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2623 Wilmington Rd, Suite B, New Castle, PA 16105 Phone: 724-658-7790 Fax: 724-658-5767 |
Tracy Paoletta, Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2623 Wilmington Rd, New Castle, PA 16105 Phone: 724-658-7790 |
News Archive
A preliminary study suggests that combining a medication currently used to treat multiple sclerosis with an antibiotic may slow the progress of the disease, according to an article posted online today that will appear in the February 2008 print issue of Archives of Neurology.
In a study of adults recruited and followed up over the past 3 decades in the United States, longer duration of overall and abdominal obesity beginning in young adulthood was associated with higher rates of coronary artery calcification, a subclinical predictor of coronary heart disease, according to a study in the July 17 issue of JAMA.
Although statins are widely used to prevent heart attacks, strokes, and other cardiovascular disorders, new research shows that the class of drugs may actually have negative effects on some cardiac patients. A new study presented at CHEST 2009, the 75th annual international scientific assembly of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP), found that statins have beneficial effects on patients with systolic heart failure (SHF), but those with diastolic heart failure (DHF) experienced the opposite effect, including increased dyspnea, fatigue, and decreased exercise tolerance.
In a recently published article in The Lancet's Child & Adolescent Health, scientists have described in detail neurological and psychiatric manifestations of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection in children. As mentioned in the study, an estimated prevalence of infection-related neurological complications and pediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome in hospitalized children and adolescents is about 3.8 cases per 100 patients.
› Verified 3 days ago