Preparing for Your Visit as an International Patient | NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health provides information on how to prepare for your visit as an international patient traveling from abroad.
Preparing for Your Visit to the Family Health Centers at NYU Langone | NYU Langone Health
Get tips for preparing for your visit to the Family Health Centers at NYU Langone.
Prescription Medications for Chronic Sinusitis | NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone doctors may prescribe medications including corticosteroids and antibiotics to treat chronic sinusitis.
Prescription Refills & Pharmacist Questions | NYU Langone Health
Prescription refill requests and questions for pharmacists from NYU Langone’s Ambulatory Care Pharmacy can be submitted online.
PRESERVE Heart Study
The purpose of this study is to evaluate if Non-Ischemic Heart Preservation (NIHP) of extended criteria donor hearts using the XVIVO Heart Preservation System (XHPS) is a safe and effective way to preserve and transport hearts for transplantation
Preston Robert Tisch Center for Men’s Health | NYU Langone Health
At NYU Langone’s Preston Robert Tisch Center for Men’s Health, you can receive most of your medical care in one convenient location.
Preston Robert Tisch Center for Men’s Health Doctors | NYU Langone Health
Find a doctor at the Preston Robert Tisch Center for Men’s Health at NYU Langone.
Preterm Labor | NYU Langone Health
Doctors at NYU Langone specialize in preventing preterm labor and caring for babies born before 37 weeks of pregnancy.
Preterm Labor Diagnosis | NYU Langone Health
Doctors at NYU Langone perform a physical exam and medical tests before diagnosing preterm labor.
Prevalence and predictors of antineuronal antibody positivity in focal epilepsy
Antibodies are proteins that normally exist to fight off things foreign to your body (like infections), but in certain diseases, they can attack the body itself and cause disease. The purpose of this research study is to find out how often people with epilepsy carry antibodies to brain proteins and whether there are clues to whether a patient with epilepsy may have these antibodies. There are antibodies that can target proteins in the brain. This can occur in a tenth to a fifth of patients with epilepsy but the exact number is unknown. Antibodies can be detected in the blood and/or in the fluid that the brain and spinal cord are surrounded by (called the cerebrospinal fluid).