Ms. Holly L. Rountree LICENSED DIETITIAN
Dietitian-Nutritionist
2501 N PATTERSON ST VALDOSTA GA, 31602About
Dr. Holly Rountree practices Nutritional Medicine in VALDOSTA, GA. Dr. Rountree has received an education on and advises people on matters of food and nutrition, considering how they both impact health. Nutritionists? help patients choose the right things to eat, help them plan menus, and advise them on the health effects of certain foods. Nutritionists assess a patients current dietary habits and needs, educate them on healthy eating habits, follow up to ensure the menus are working, and write reports that document a patients progress.
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Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Interaction between light-dark cycles and circadian rhythm on sleep and wakefulness in albino rats.
- Sleep deprivation in the rat: XVI. Effects in a light-dark cycle.
- 3He lung imaging in an open access, very-low-field human magnetic resonance imaging system.
- Interstitial gas and density segregation of vertically vibrated granular media.
- Posture-dependent human 3He lung imaging in an open-access MRI system: initial results.
- An open-access, very-low-field MRI system for posture-dependent 3He human lung imaging.
- [18F]-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography in children with neurofibromatosis type 1 and plexiform neurofibromas: correlation with malignant transformation.
- Gallbladder splenosis: a hereto unreported mimicker of a gallbladder neoplasm.
- Localization and significance of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase in normal and neoplastic mouse skin.
- Localization and significance of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase in normal and neoplastic mouse skin.
- Sulindac sulfide, an aspirin-like compound, inhibits proliferation, causes cell cycle quiescence, and induces apoptosis in HT-29 colon adenocarcinoma cells.
- Effects of chronic sleep deprivation on central cholinergic receptors in rat brain.
- Effects of chronic total sleep deprivation on central noradrenergic receptors in rat brain.
- Sleep deprivation in the rat: XX. Differences in wake and sleep temperatures during recovery.
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