Dr. Mark Peter Braydich, DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 45 E Liberty St, Hubbard, OH 44425 Phone: 330-534-5408 |
Michael John Parish, D.D.S. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 211 N Main St, Hubbard, OH 44425 Phone: 330-534-9212 Fax: 330-534-9434 |
Dr. James L. Mapes Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 255 W Liberty St, Hubbard, OH 44425 Phone: 330-534-3992 |
Rudolph John Braydich Jr., DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 45 E Liberty St, Hubbard, OH 44425 Phone: 330-534-5408 Fax: 330-534-5490 |
News Archive
Adjusting a specific deep-brain circuit's firing frequency immediately and dramatically alters rats' forebrain activity and alertness levels, Stanford University School of Medicine investigators have shown.
A collaboration of researchers at Louisiana State University, University of Missouri, and University of Tennessee found that peer victimization is associated with adverse psychological and behavioral problems, including depression and risky health behaviors such as substance use and unprotected sex with multiple partners.
The WHO has said it will assist government officials evaluating whether the presence of bacteria containing the NDM-1 gene in the water supply in New Delhi poses health risks, Agence France-Presse reports. The announcement comes after the Lancet last week published a report that bacteria carrying NDM-1, a gene that enables resistance to a variety of antibiotics, "was found in 51 out of 171 New Delhi samples taken from water pools and two out of 50 tap water samples," the news service writes.
Do you wish you could decrease your waistline? Reducing abdominal obesity can lower health risks – but despite claims you may have seen on the Internet, no trending diet can help you specifically eliminate belly fat, according to an article in ACSM's Health & Fitness Journal, an official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine.
Increased activity in a deep-lying region of the brain called the amygdala is associated with a higher risk of heart attack and stroke, according to a study published in The Lancet.
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