Bering Health Llc Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 309 Bering St., Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-434-2121 |
Bering Wellness Center Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 207 E King Pl, Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-434-2121 |
Natural Health Chiropractic Pc Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 113 E Front St, Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-443-7477 Fax: 907-447-7487 |
Dr. Richard Brent Oesterritter, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 113 East Front St, Suite 102 B1530, Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-443-7477 |
Dr. Phillip Daniel Schobert, DC Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 113 E Front St, Suite 102, Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-443-7477 Fax: 907-443-7487 |
Dr. Craig D Brummert, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 113 E Front St, Suite 102, Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-443-7477 Fax: 907-443-7487 |
Arctic Chiropractic Nome, Llc Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 113 W Front St, Suite 102, Nome, AK 99762 Phone: 907-443-7477 Fax: 907-443-7487 |
News Archive
A National Institutes of Health grant will help LSU Pennington Biomedical Research Center take the next step to better understanding how to prevent the kidney damage and failure caused by type 2 diabetes.
A breakthrough in understanding how brain damage spreads - and how it could potentially be limited - has been made through a collaboration between neuroscientists and engineers at the Universities of Dundee and Strathclyde.
MIT engineers have developed a fuel cell that runs on the same sugar that powers human cells: glucose. This glucose fuel cell could be used to drive highly efficient brain implants of the future, which could help paralyzed patients move their arms and legs again.
Late adolescence is a period when many youth become involved in high-risk behaviors with adverse consequences. Researchers at the Mailman School of Public Health with colleagues at Johns Hopkins University studied the degree to which two such behaviors, adolescent sexual behaviors and gambling, affected African American youth in nine primary schools in Baltimore, MD.
When genes are deleted on a particular section of chromosome 11, the result is an aggressive form of the childhood cancer neuroblastoma. A new study suggests that detecting this genetic deletion during the initial evaluation of children with neuroblastoma may indicate to physicians that they should recommend a more aggressive regimen of chemotherapy to fight the cancer.
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