Jonathan Quan Lee, DDS Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1029 Jefferson Blvd Ste C, West Sacramento, CA 95691 Phone: 916-371-2591 |
Alejandro Gonzalez Del Castillo Duran Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2455 Jefferson Blvd Ste 95691130, West Sacramento, CA 95691 Phone: 916-372-8062 |
Dr. Haipei Luan, DDS Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2455 Jefferson Blvd Ste 130, West Sacramento, CA 95691 Phone: 916-372-8062 |
Dr. Dick Cheung Huang, DMD Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1102 Jefferson Blvd, Suite A, West Sacramento, CA 95691 Phone: 916-372-5757 Fax: 916-372-4791 |
News Archive
Advaxis, Inc., a leader in developing the next generation of immunotherapies for cancer and infectious diseases, announced today that it has completed enrollment in Lm-LLO-E7-15, the 110 patient, randomized Phase 2 trial of ADXS-HPV in women with recurrent/refractory cervical cancer who have failed cytotoxic therapy.
Subtle characteristics in the spontaneous movement of very young babies may reveal clinically important aspects of their neurodevelopment. Visual assessment of typical movement patterns (General movements, GM) by a clinical expert is known to be effective in early identification of e.g. cerebral palsy.
A compound found in the bark of the white birch tree - betulonic acid, a derivative of betulinol - may finally have been rendered a water-soluble, bio-available drug, and is already showing the potential to be a possible agent against prostate cancer - in cell culture and in an animal model.
New technology that will marry probes that can detect cancer tumors through the skin with high-precision robotic surgery is to be developed for use in hospital settings for the first time in a project led by the University of Warwick.
A cluster of carbon nanotubes coated with a thin layer of protein-recognizing polymer form a biosensor capable of using electrochemical signals to detect minute amounts of proteins, which could provide a crucial new diagnostic tool for the detection of a range of illnesses, a team of Boston College researchers report in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
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