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Peter B. Cotton (born 1939) is a British gastroenterologist [1] best known for his advancement in digestive disease, pioneering and naming the Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) procedure [citation needed] and creating the Digestive Disease Center at the Medical University of South Carolina.
In 1994, Peter B. Cotton formed the Digestive Disease Center at the Medical University of South Carolina. The center specializes in the management and treatment of digestive diseases. In 2012, it was the first hospital in South Carolina to perform the new LINX Reflux Management System treatment for patients with GERD.
Mayer-Davis led the Carolina activity for the SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth study, the largest and most diverse study of diabetes among American youth. SEARCH was supported by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. The study found that many young people who had ...
Studies have shown that the virus can hide out in the “nooks and crannies” of the digestive system ... a gastroenterologist at the Medical University of South Carolina and co-author of the ...
Tanya Freirich, a registered dietitian nutritionist in Charlotte, North Carolina, who practices as The Lupus Dietitian, agrees that the body does a good job of detoxing what it doesn’t need ...
"Movement is such a simple but underrated tool for digestion," says Murphy Richter, who adds that being active increases blood flow to digestive organs, helps regulate blood sugar, and can help ...
David B. Adams (born 1950) is an American physician who is a Professor of Surgery, Chief, Division of Gastrointestinal and Laparoscopic Surgery and Co-Director of the Digestive Disease Center at the Medical University of South Carolina. [1] Adams specializes in chronic pancreatitis surgeries.
Circa 1890, he dropped out of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, owing to his father's business going bankrupt. After returning to North Carolina, he was a public school teacher for about a year, and soon thereafter opened a drug store in New Bern named the "Bradham Drug Company" that, like many other drug stores of the time, also housed a soda fountain.