Ms. Chelsea Lynn Singleton, LICSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 110 Glenwood Ave, Troy, AL 36081 Phone: 334-566-7600 |
Rachel K Garrett Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 Randolph St, Troy, AL 36081 Phone: 334-268-7453 |
Dana Baldo-downs Wade, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1412 Elba Hwy, Troy, AL 36079 Phone: 334-566-8822 |
News Archive
When we are young, our blood stem cells produce an even and well-balanced number of red and white blood cells according to need. As we age, however, the capacity of the blood stem cells to produce the number of blood cells we need declines.
The brain is a notoriously difficult organ to treat, but Johns Hopkins researchers report they are one step closer to having a drug-delivery system flexible enough to overcome some key challenges posed by brain cancer and perhaps other maladies affecting that organ.
Scientists have pinpointed a chemical messenger that frees some white blood cells from the body's normal constraints, allowing the cells to act like renegades that could damage nerves in the central nervous system. The work, to be published in the July 15 issue of the Journal of Immunology and just published on-line, helps explain one of the fundamental mysteries of multiple sclerosis (MS).
The World Health Organization (WHO) is hosting a three-day consultation to identify the factors that allow diseases to jump from animals to humans (zoonoses), as well as to improve surveillance systems for their monitoring and control.
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