Dr. Melissa A Appleton MD
Infectious Disease Specialist | Infectious Disease
616 W Forest Ave Jackson TN, 38301About
Dr. Melissa Appleton is an infectious disease specialist practicing in Jackson, TN. Dr. Appleton specializes in infections that are difficult to diagnose or unresponsive to treatments, such as HIV or airborne infections from a foreign country. Infectious disease specialists usually work with conditions that are not treatable by a primary physician but it is important to keep contact with the primary physician in order to receive information about the patients history and for deciding which diagnostic tests are appropriate.
Education and Training
Univ of Tn, Memphis, Coll of Med, Memphis Tn 1985
Georgetown University in Washington DC 1985
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Infectious Disease
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Consistency in the observation of features used to classify duct carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast.
- Predicting anterior cruciate ligament integrity in patients with osteoarthritis.
- Copper toxicity in housed lambs.
- The pathogenesis of hidradenitis suppurativa: a closer look at apocrine and apoeccrine glands.
- Normal colonic mucosa in hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer shows no generalised increase in somatic mutation.
- Racial variation in the O-acetylation phenotype of human colonic mucosa.
- Granulomatous hidradenitis suppurativa and cutaneous Crohn's disease.
- Ulcerating rheumatoid nodule of the vulva.
- Primary sarcomas of the lung: a clinicopathological and immunohistochemical study of 14 cases.
- Thrombomodulin as a marker of vascular and lymphatic tumours.
- Probable association between hidradenitis suppurativa and Crohn's disease: significance of epithelioid granuloma.
- Evidence of effectiveness of clinical audit in improving histopathology reporting standards of mastectomy specimens.
- Increased stem cell somatic mutation in the non-neoplastic colorectal mucosa of patients with familial adenomatous polyposis.
- No difference in stem cell somatic mutation between the background mucosa of
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