Dr. Maria Teresa Arguelles De Guia, DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 15712 Arrow Hwy, Irwindale, CA 91706 Phone: 626-337-2600 Fax: 626-337-2644 |
Dr. Myriam Lucia Pardo, D.D.S Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 16026 Arrow Hwy, Irwindale, CA 91706 Phone: 626-856-3459 Fax: 626-856-3598 |
Dr. Monica Pardo, D.D.S. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 16026 East Arrow Hwy., Irwindale, CA 91706 Phone: 626-856-3459 |
Dr. Jaime Arturo Pardo, D.D.S. Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 16026 Arrow Hwy, Irwindale, CA 91706 Phone: 626-856-3459 Fax: 626-856-3598 |
Dr. Xeres Desiree Azaula Pleyto, DDS Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 16029 Arrow Hwy, Suite E, Irwindale, CA 91706 Phone: 626-962-7200 Fax: 626-962-7220 |
Dr. Elly Swadipura, D.D.S. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 13105 Ramona Blvd, Suite A, Irwindale, CA 91706 Phone: 626-962-2778 Fax: 626-338-8669 |
News Archive
In a White House briefing on Wednesday, "senior Administration officials announced a series of new initiatives to promote game-changing innovations to solve long-standing development challenges" in response to President Obama's "call to harness science technology, and innovation to spark global development," Gayle Smith, special assistant to the president, and Tom Kalil, senior adviser for science, technology, and innovation, write in this post in the White House Blog.
The University of Maryland R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore, Md., will serve as one of 12 core clinical centers in a newly established Extremity Trauma Clinical Research Consortium funded by the U.S. Department of Defense.
Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health have found that the major malaria-transmitting mosquito species, Anopheles gambiae, is evolving into two separate species with different traits, a development that could both complicate malaria control efforts and potentially require new disease prevention methods. Their findings were published in back-to-back articles in the October 22 issue of the journal Science.
A drop of blood or a chunk of tissue smaller than the period at the end of this sentence may one day be all that is necessary to diagnose cancers and assess their response to treatment, say researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
A new nuclear medicine method for detecting malignant melanoma, one of the most aggressive skin cancers, has been successfully tested for the first time in humans and could improve detection of both primary and metastatic melanoma.
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