Dr. Herbert S Su, DDS Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9611 Garvey Ave, #124, S El Monte, CA 91733 Phone: 626-448-2296 Fax: 626-448-2296 |
Dr. Kyung Hye Choi, D.D.S. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1928 Tyler Ave, Suit #d-168, S El Monte, CA 91733 Phone: 626-443-7922 Fax: 626-443-7926 |
Dr. Simon S Pan Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9328 Garvey Ave, Suite #a, S El Monte, CA 91733 Phone: 626-350-0588 Fax: 626-350-0989 |
Htwe Htwe, D.D.S Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1914 Durfee Ave, S El Monte, CA 91733 Phone: 626-350-5222 Fax: 626-350-9711 |
News Archive
Infections caused by viruses, such as respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, measles, parainfluenza, and Ebola, are typically considered acute. These viruses cause disease quickly and live within a host for a limited time. But in some cases, the effects of the infection, and presence of the virus itself, can persist.
The German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care reinvestigated the benefit of biomarker tests to support the decision for or against adjuvant systemic chemotherapy in certain breast cancer patients, that is, women with primary hormone receptor-positive, HER2/neu-negative breast cancer and 0 to 3 affected lymph nodes.
Women's minds and genitals respond differently to sexual arousal, whereas in men, the responses of the body and mind are more in tune with each other, according to Assistant Professor Meredith Chivers, from Queen's University in Kingston, Canada, and her international collaborators, Michael Seto, Martin Lalumi-re, Ellen Laan, and Teresa Grimbos. Their meta-analysis1 of the extent of agreement between subjective ratings and physiological measures of sexual arousal in men and women is published online this week in Springer's journal Archives of Sexual Behavior.
RTI International will continue research efforts to improve and prevent premature disease and death among women and children in developing countries as part of the Global Network for Women's and Children's Health Research.
Karl Herrup thinks that the national research effort to understand Alzheimer-s disease has gone about as far as it can go with its current theories.
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