George J. Spader, Dds, Pc Clinic/Center - Dental Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7437 Jackman Rd, Temperance, MI 48182 Phone: 734-847-1780 Fax: 734-847-2080 |
Tru Dental Michigan Pc Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7960 Lewis Ave, Temperance, MI 48182 Phone: 734-847-9905 Fax: 734-847-9905 |
David L Clark Dds Pc Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7960 Lewis Avenue, Temperance, MI 48182 Phone: 734-847-9905 Fax: 734-847-1848 |
Family Medical Center Lenawee Dental Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 8765 Lewis Ave, Temperance, MI 48182 Phone: 734-847-3802 Fax: 734-850-0520 |
Liberty Corners Dental Pllc Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7298 Jackman Rd, Temperance, MI 48182 Phone: 734-847-6350 |
Recca Puri Dds, Pllc Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 8339 Lewis Ave, Temperance, MI 48182 Phone: 734-847-1955 Fax: 734-847-4394 |
News Archive
After years of trial and error, scientists have coaxed human embryonic stem cells to become spinal motor neurons, critical nervous system pathways that relay messages from the brain to the rest of the body.
In the case of aggressive fibromatosis, the good news is that it is a slow-growing benign tumor. The bad news is that this abdominal tumor often recurs after surgical removal. This is particularly true among children. While headway has been made in isolating causes of this recurrence in adults, it is less clear in children.
Hoarding friends on Facebook - or followers on Twitter - won't do much to stave off loneliness if those relationships lack any kind of strong connection, new research finds.
Some Democrats on the House International Relations Committee said they want to investigate funding for faith-based HIV/AIDS and abstinence-until-marriage initiatives receiving money under the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief to determine whether taxpayer money is being used appropriately, the Boston Globe reports.
For the first time, researchers have used a healthy person's complete genome sequence to predict his risk for dozens of diseases and how he will respond to several common medications. The risk analysis, from the Stanford University School of Medicine, also incorporates more-traditional information such as a patient's age and gender and other clinical measurements.
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