Cynthia Susanne Sanders, LPC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 50 Chestnut St, Elberton, GA 30635 Phone: 706-213-2048 |
Crystal M Ingram Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 62 Chestnut St, Elberton, GA 30635 Phone: 706-213-2048 Fax: 706-213-2026 |
Joanna Fleming, LPC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1570 Pearl Mill Rd, Elberton, GA 30635 Phone: 706-988-0919 |
Shirley Ann Bowman, LPC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1131 Thompson Dr, Elberton, GA 30635 Phone: 706-550-7321 |
Caron Mcdonald, LPC Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 50 Chestnut St # At, Elberton, GA 30635 Phone: 706-542-9700 Fax: 706-227-7249 |
Ms. Suzanne Peers Moore, LISW-CP Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 93 Carey St, Elberton, GA 30635 Phone: 864-512-1810 Fax: 864-512-8619 |
News Archive
Shannon Carson, MD, professor of medicine and division chief of Pulmonary Diseases and Critical Care Medicine at the UNC School of Medicine, along with co-principal investigator Judith Nelson, MD, JD, at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and Christopher Cox, MD, of Duke University, led a four-year, first-of-its kind clinical study on the effects of palliative care for medical decision-makers.
Supelco, a division of Sigma-Aldrich®, announced today the launch of Ascentis Express Peptide ES-C18, a high-speed, high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) column based on a new 160 angstrom Fused-Core™ particle design. This column design exhibits very high column efficiency, providing a stable, reversed phase packing with a pore structure and pore size that is optimized for reversed-phase HPLC separations of peptides and polypeptides.
When it comes to analyzing cell components or body fluids or developing new medications, there is no way around mass spectrometry. Mass spectrometry is a highly sensitive method of measurement that has been used for many years for the analysis of chemical and biological materials.
Researchers from North Carolina State University have developed an "off-the-shelf" artificial cardiac patch that can deliver cardiac cell-derived healing factors directly to the site of heart attack injury. In a rat model of heart attack, the freezable, cell-free patch improved recovery.
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