Macy Toelle Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 310 E Main St, Parkston, SD 57366 Phone: 605-928-5000 |
Dynamic Chiropractic Prof Llc Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 310 E Main St, Parkston, SD 57366 Phone: 605-928-5000 |
Parkston Chiropractic Clinic, Prof. L.l.c. Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 103 West Glynn Drive, Parkston, SD 57366 Phone: 605-928-7777 Fax: 605-928-1477 |
Dr. Mark A. Werning, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 708 W Main St, Parkston, SD 57366 Phone: 605-928-3304 Fax: 605-928-3505 |
Werning Chiropractic, Pc Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 708 W Main St, Parkston, SD 57366 Phone: 605-928-3304 Fax: 605-928-3505 |
Dr. Jessica Ann Wolf, DC Chiropractor Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 103 West Glynn Drive, Parkston, SD 57366 Phone: 605-928-7777 Fax: 605-928-1477 |
News Archive
Mayo Clinic researchers have found a way to detect and eliminate potentially troublemaking stem cells to make stem cell therapy safer. Induced Pluripotent Stem cells, also known as iPS cells, are bioengineered from adult tissues to have properties of embryonic stem cells, which have the unlimited capacity to differentiate and grow into any desired types of cells, such as skin, brain, lung and heart cells.
Taser shots to the chest are no more dangerous than those delivered to other body locations, according to a new study by one of the country's leading experts on the devices.
The detection of prions in the blood of patients with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease could lead to a noninvasive diagnosis prior to symptoms and a way to identify prion contamination of the donated blood supply, according to researchers at McGovern Medical School at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
The American Academy of Dermatology has honored board-certified dermatologists Steven Daveluy, MD, FAAD, and Benjamin Workman, MD, FAAD, as Patient Care Heroes for their teamwork with oncologists to diagnose a rare condition affecting just one in a million patients, known as drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome.
Scientists have found clear indicators for how the interaction of poor hygiene and antibiotic use contribute to the colonization of antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) bacteria in humans, a problem that contributes to hundreds of thousands of deaths annually.
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