Steven M. Doering Dmd, Pllc Clinic/Center - Dental Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3118 N Croatan Hwy Ste 102, Kill Devil Hills, NC 27948 Phone: 252-441-5811 Fax: 252-441-2233 |
Budde & Bueker D.d.s., Partnership Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3118 N Croatan Hwy, Kill Devil Hills, NC 27948 Phone: 252-441-5811 |
Samuel Irby Smith Dds Pa Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1001 S Croatan Hwy, Kill Devil Hills, NC 27948 Phone: 252-499-0700 Fax: 252-499-0706 |
News Archive
Cancer Research Technology Limited (CRT), the oncology-focused development and commercialisation company, today announces it has agreed an exclusive worldwide licence with Abiogen Pharma S.p.A. (Italy).
The Hill reports that some supporters have recently shifted their tone about the health law challenges being "frivolous," acknowledging the Supreme Court wouldn't allow so much time for arguments if the justices viewed the issues as "a waste of time." Also, Politico explores the fate of the law's Medicaid expansion in the context of the court challenge, and CQ HealthBeat reports on the addition of plaintiffs and more amicus briefs.
Everyone has seen the ads or the products on the shelves. A dietary supplement that promises to make consumers skinny, without dieting or exercise. Or the one that will bulk them up and turn them into the envy of other weightlifters at the gym. Not to mention the one to make them perform better in the bedroom.
A highly detailed CT scan of the heart can safely and quickly rule out the possibility of a heart attack among many patients who come to hospital emergency rooms with chest pain, according to the results of a study that will be presented by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania today at the American College of Cardiology's 61st Annual Scientific Session and published concurrently in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Researchers have discovered key details of how rheumatoid arthritis (RA) destroys bone, according to a study published in the Aug. 22 edition of the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The findings are already guiding attempts to design new drugs to reverse RA-related bone loss and may also address more common forms of osteoporosis with a few adjustments.
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