Dr. Audie D Coggins, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 906 E Avenue B, Alpine, TX 79830 Phone: 432-837-5070 Fax: 432-837-3203 |
Coggins Chiropractic Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 906 E Avenue B, Alpine, TX 79830 Phone: 432-837-5070 Fax: 432-837-3203 |
Coggins Chiropractic Clinic Chiropractor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 906 E Avenue B, Alpine, TX 79830 Phone: 432-837-5070 Fax: 432-837-3203 |
Dr. Beau Jeffrey Coggins, D.C. Chiropractor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 906 E Avenue B, Alpine, TX 79830 Phone: 432-837-5070 Fax: 432-837-3203 |
News Archive
Courtagen Life Sciences, Inc., an innovative molecular information company, announced today a collaboration with Connecticut Children's Medical Center to utilize Courtagen's sophisticated Next Generation Sequencing assays to help identify and characterize alterations found in genes associated with ASD.
NPR: "[A] new study finds that even for infants and preschoolers, a good, long night's sleep may be just as important as diet and physical activity. Over the past three decades, obesity rates have doubled among children age 2 to 5, and tripled among 6- to 11-year-olds. So University of Washington maternal and child health researcher Janice Bell wanted to know whether sleep had anything to do with it.
Biocartis SA, a diagnostics company focused on fast and low-cost, integrated molecular and immunodiagnostics based on its proprietary micro-technology platform, today announced the successful closing of a Series A equity financing round. The Company raised EUR 10 million (~ USD 14.9 million) from a syndicate of leading life science investors.
Although the dangers of obesity have become increasingly clear in recent years, new research from the World Health Organization suggests that the number of people who are obese around the world will only increase. The most recent report analyzed all of the European nations and concluded that the percentage of obese citizens is set to rise in nearly every country.
Higher levels of a protein called S-100 in patients with melanoma may correlate with a higher risk of having the disease return, say researchers at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI), who presented their findings today at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Chicago.
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