Rachel Mae Dodds, AUD Audiologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3200 Shore Dr, Marinette, WI 54143 Phone: 715-735-3187 Fax: 715-735-7072 |
Sara Seppi, AUD Audiologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3200 Shore Dr, Marinette, WI 54143 Phone: 715-135-3187 Fax: 715-735-7072 |
Jodi Y Wilske, AUD Audiologist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3003 University Dr, Marinette, WI 54143 Phone: 715-735-3187 Fax: 715-735-5848 |
Megan Leona Swan, AUD Audiologist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2820 Roosevelt Rd, Marinette, WI 54143 Phone: 715-735-5225 Fax: 715-735-5388 |
Beth J Gabavics, AUD Audiologist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3200 Shore Dr, Marinette, WI 54143 Phone: 715-735-3187 Fax: 715-735-7072 |
News Archive
Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have discovered a group of substances in the body that play a key role in controlling bone density, and on this basis they have begun development of a drug for prevention and treatment of osteoporosis and other bone disorders.
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated today announced the initiation of a Phase 3b study called OPTIMIZE that will evaluate twice-daily (BID) dosing of a telaprevir-based combination regimen in people chronically infected with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus (HCV) who have not been treated previously. This is the first Phase 3 study to evaluate twice-daily dosing of a protease inhibitor for the treatment of hepatitis C. OPTIMIZE will not include a control arm of pegylated-interferon and ribavirin alone.
Counsyl has partnered with ARUP Laboratories, a nonprofit enterprise of the University of Utah, to expand its pre-pregnancy and early pregnancy genetic test offering for prospective parents. ARUP's molecular genetic testing laboratory already provides a comprehensive set of testing options for a broad range of inherited disorders.
When motors break down, getting where you want to go becomes a struggle. Problems arise in much the same way for critical brain receptors when the molecular motors they depend on fail to operate. Now, researchers reporting in Cell Reports, a Cell Press publication, on February 7, have shown these broken motors induce stress and anxiety in mice. The discovery may point the way to new kinds of drugs to treat anxiety and other disorders.
Something rotten never smelled so sweet. This is what members of a team of scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) are telling one another as they discuss a new finding they did not expect to make. They have discovered that hydrogen sulfide (H2S) - the flammable, highly toxic gas that we usually associate with the smell of rotten eggs in landfills and sewers - plays an important role in the regulation of a signaling pathway implicated in biological malfunctions linked to Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, among others.
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