Dr. Benjamin L Garr, D.M.D. Dentist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 740 4th Ave S Ste 201, Carrington, ND 58421 Phone: 701-652-2300 Fax: 701-652-2303 |
Kali Anderson, DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 740 4th Ave S Ste 201, Carrington, ND 58421 Phone: 701-652-2300 |
Dr. Robert Martin Voglewede, D.D.S, Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 881 Main St, Carrington, ND 58421 Phone: 701-652-1148 |
Dr. Chaz James Bauer, DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 923 1st St S, Carrington, ND 58421 Phone: 701-652-2801 |
Jay Allen Bauer, DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 923 1st Street South, Carrington, ND 58421 Phone: 701-652-2801 Fax: 701-652-2802 |
News Archive
Green Cross Corporation, a South Korean biopharmaceutical company, today announced that it has submitted its Biologics License Application for IVIG-SN (human normal immunoglobulin G for intravenous administration) to the United States Food and Drug Administration.
According to a report published earlier this month in Virology Journal by a team at the bioinformatics laboratory of the Centre for Excellence in Molecular Biology (CEMB) in Lahore, Pakistan, that country is reporting more polio cases than Nigeria, India and Afghanistan - the three other countries where the disease is endemic - combined, SciDev.Net reports.
Researchers in the United States have designed a modular protein subunit vaccine against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) that elicited a strong immune response in macaques and prevented the animals from developing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
Professional football has recently come under scrutiny for the lingering effects of injuries caused by years of high-impact collisions, but doctors are quick to point out that football is not the only sport where athletes are suffering intense physical pain. One of the most physically demanding sports, according to medical experts, is professional bowling.
Penn State College of Medicine researchers have developed a tiny package that searches for and destroys up to 80 percent of hepatitis B virus in the livers of mice.
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