Dr. John Lance Pickard, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4370 Medical Arts Dr, Suite 105, Flower Mound, TX 75028 Phone: 214-691-1902 Fax: 214-513-2059 |
Dr. Jessie Yuyue Chen, M.D. Urology - Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4370 Medical Arts Dr Ste 270, Flower Mound, TX 75028 Phone: 972-394-4500 |
John Lawrence Fairbanks, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4370 Medical Arts Dr, Suite 105, Flower Mound, TX 75028 Phone: 214-394-4500 Fax: 214-513-2059 |
Marie Blanche N Tchetgen, MD Urology - Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4370 Medical Arts Dr Ste 340, Flower Mound, TX 75028 Phone: 972-394-4500 Fax: 214-513-2059 |
News Archive
David Olmos, the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre's Head of the Prostate Cancer and Genitourinary Tumours Clinical Research Unit, has won the 2014 Stewart Rahr-PCF Young Investigator Award, endowed by the Prostate Cancer Foundation - the leading philanthropic organisation for cutting-edge research into prostate cancer.
Children whose families own dogs are more active than those without, according to new research. Researchers from St George's, University of London studied 2,065 children aged nine to ten, and found that children from dog-owning families have higher levels of physical activity compared to children without.
Loretta King, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, announced today that a federal grand jury in Denver has charged Donald Hertz with transmitting a threat in interstate commerce and with violating the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act for allegedly threatening an employee of a Colorado abortion clinic.
Middle-aged women with high levels of a specific amino acid in their blood are twice as likely to suffer from Alzheimer's many years later, reveals a thesis from the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. This discovery this could lead to a new and simple way of determining who is at risk long before there are any signs of the illness.
Vaccines that induce protective T-cell responses could protect against members across the filovirus family, according to a study published February 28 in the open-access journal PLOS Pathogens by Tomáš Hanke of the University of Oxford, Bette Korber of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, and colleagues.
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