Eubanks Chiropractic Llc Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 604 W Bolling St, A, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-4525 Fax: 870-367-4526 |
Dr. Dustin Clint Eubanks, D.C Chiropractor Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 604 A West Bolling Street, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-723-3339 |
Dr. Ryan D Collins, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 975 Highway 425 N, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-1919 Fax: 870-367-2807 |
Alexee Chambers, DC Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 501 Highway 425 S, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-4240 |
Collins Chiropractic Center Llc Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 975 Highway 425 N, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-1919 Fax: 870-367-2807 |
Tyler Collins Chiropractor Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 106 N Hyatt St, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-1919 Fax: 870-367-2807 |
Dr. Wendell Bryant, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 232 S Main St, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-8442 Fax: 870-367-2869 |
Dr. Mark W Bryant, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 232 S Main St, Monticello, AR 71655 Phone: 870-367-8442 Fax: 870-367-2869 |
News Archive
Two heads are better than one, as the saying goes - and a new study by a duo at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) demonstrates how having two attending surgeons in the operating room during spinal surgeries can benefit patients in multiple ways.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved maraviroc, an antiretroviral drug for use in adult HIV patients. Maraviroc, sold under the trade name Selzentry, is the first in a new class of drugs designed to slow the advancement of HIV and received priority review by the FDA.
Evidence of a third faculty of the brain, the conative faculty, was announced on October 6, 2010 at a conference for business, education, and government leaders from nine countries and 35 states, hosted by Kolbe Corp.
A new Scientific Reports paper puts an evolutionary twist on a classic question. Instead of asking why we get cancer, Leonardo Oña of Osnabrück University and Michael Lachmann of the Santa Fe Institute use signaling theory to explore how our bodies have evolved to keep us from getting more cancer.
Imported resistance has rendered ineffective the two affordable malaria drugs which have been the mainstay of malaria treatment in Africa for forty years, according to experts writing today in the journal Science.
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