Dana Pelliccio, LPC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 166 Route 81, Killingworth, CT 06419 Phone: 203-600-9494 Fax: 888-492-8998 |
Ms. Sarah Suatoni, MA, LPC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 133 Roast Meat Hill Rd, Killingworth, CT 06419 Phone: 917-912-8367 |
Elizabeth Cucciniello-young Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 255 Route 80, Killingworth, CT 06419 Phone: 203-710-1953 |
Mr. Steven M Jack, LCSW Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 166 Route 81, Killingworth, CT 06419 Phone: 860-975-8410 |
Amanda Francis Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 22 Running Brook Dr, Killingworth, CT 06419 Phone: 203-605-9705 |
Kelsey Ann Kearns Buttendorf Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 147 Pond Meadow Rd, Killingworth, CT 06419 Phone: 860-304-1676 |
News Archive
The best-known genetic variant linked to Alzheimer's disease may be "at work" promoting deposits of plaque in the brain long before any symptoms of the disease can be measured on tests, according to a national research study led by Indiana University School of Medicine investigators.
Targeting the neuroinflammatory causes of Parkinson's disease with a naturally present brain chemical signal could offer a better understanding of the clinical mechanisms of the disease and open a future therapeutic window, reports a team of researchers from the University of South Florida Department Neurosurgery and Brain Repair and the James A. Haley Veterans' Administration Hospital, Tampa.
Young children of African ancestry are more at risk of developing obesity if they possess a genetic variant that reduces their ability to produce the hormone leptin.
Asuragen, Inc., a leader in molecular diagnostics and RNA-based pharmacogenomics services, announced today that it has entered into research agreements with The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center, Dartmouth's Hitchcock Medical Center and the University of Sherbrooke to develop a microRNA-based diagnostic test to aid the detection of pancreatic cancer from fine-needle aspirate (FNA) biopsies.
The molecular switches regulating human cell growth do a great job of replacing cells that die during the course of a lifetime. But when they misfire, life-threatening cancers can occur. Research led by scientists at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) has revealed a new electrical mechanism that can control these switches.
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