Laurence Octavius Watkins, MD Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1801 Se Hillmoor Drive, C208, Port St Lucie, FL 34952 Phone: 772-337-5083 Fax: 772-337-5088 |
Dr. Sabrina Zanto, DO Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1700 Se Hillmoor Dr, Port St Lucie, FL 34952 Phone: 772-335-9600 Fax: 776-335-9699 |
Dr. Brian A Akrami, D.O. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1700 Se Hillmoor Dr Ste 407, Port St Lucie, FL 34952 Phone: 772-335-9600 |
News Archive
Adding another layer of competition to the mating game, scientists are reporting possible biochemical proof that the reproductive system of female mammals can "sense" the presence of sperm and react to it by changing the uterine environment.
Caldera Medical today announced its relocation to a new facility in Agoura Hills, CA. The former corporate headquarters of DTS offers Caldera approximately eight times more square footage in anticipation of continued growth as well as capability expansion.
Life scientists from the developing world told their European colleagues at the EAGLES Food Symposium, held this week at the New Library of Alexandria (Egypt), that they are dismayed and even horrified at the persistent failure of Europe to deploy its life sciences effectively in the fight against hunger. Our Asian, African and Latin American colleagues have said that they simply cannot understand why that on the continent of Darwin and Pasteur, the voices of science and reason have been devalued.
New research suggests that even in the absence of a concussion, blows to the head during a single season of football or ice hockey may affect the brain's white matter and cognition, or memory and thinking abilities. The study is published in the December 11, 2013, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. White matter is brain tissue that plays an important role in the speed of nerve signals.
Researchers have identified a new genome-wide significant locus (the place a gene occupies on a chromosome) for infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (IHPS), a serious gastrointestinal condition associated with gastrointestinal obstruction, according to a study in the August 21 issue of JAMA. Characteristics of this locus also suggest the possibility of an inverse relationship between levels of circulating cholesterol in neonates and IHPS risk.
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