Ad
related to: dr kenny chan ophthalmologist in st louis
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Parks was born in Old Mission, Michigan to Ruth E. and Reuben Elvin Parks. [2] In 1939, he earned a BS from Illinois College and in 1943 graduated from the Saint Louis University School of Medicine. [2]
Julia Haller, professor and chair of the Department of Ophthalmology at Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University; Eve Higginbotham, 1979, chair of the ophthalmology department at the University of Maryland School of Medicine; Gökhan S. Hotamisligil, 1994, chair of genetics and metabolism at Harvard T.H. Chan School of ...
Chi-Chao Chan is a Chinese-born American ophthalmologist and physician-scientist specialized in the diagnosis and pathology of eye diseases. She joined the National Eye Institute (NEI) as a postdoctoral researcher in 1982 and remained until her retirement in 2015.
Dr Kenny Smiles. Another affable online persona-turned-controversy magnet is Kenneth Wilstead, aka “Dr Kenny Smiles.” The Texas-based dentist boasts 700,000 followers on Instagram, 500,000 ...
Sandra Lee – dermatologist and Internet celebrity as "Dr. Pimple Popper"; now star of the TLC series Dr. Pimple Popper; Ching Chun Li – population geneticist and human geneticist; Choh Hao Li (李卓皓) – biochemist, discovered growth hormone, beta-endorphin and isolated luteinizing hormone
Dr. Perry Cox – main character of the television series Scrubs; Dr. Seth Griffin –- resident played by Bruce Greenwood on the show St. Elsewhere; Dr. Zoe Hart – big city surgical resident turned rural Alabama general practitioner played by Rachel Bilson in Hart of Dixie; Dr. James Harvey – paranormal therapist portrayed by Bill Pullman ...
In 2000, he opened his own laser vision correction center, IWANT2020.com, Inc. [1] In 2010, Dr. Chynn successfully performed the highest ASA procedure ever performed in the US, −22.00, on a patient from China. [2]
David Paton (born August 16, 1930) is an American retired ophthalmologist best known as founder in 1970 of Project Orbis (now named Orbis International, Inc.) and thereafter as its first medical director helping to develop (1970–1982) and then deploy its teaching aircraft for ophthalmologists worldwide, especially in the developing nations. [1]