Lee Roy Phillips, D.D.S. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9655 Longswamp Rd, Mertztown, PA 19539 Phone: 610-682-6386 Fax: 610-682-6387 |
Dr. William Richard Burfeind Sr., DMD Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9655 Longswamp Rd, Mertztown, PA 19539 Phone: 610-682-6386 |
Edward M Carter, D.M.D. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 410 W State St, Mertztown, PA 19539 Phone: 610-682-2194 Fax: 610-682-2195 |
Ragini Singla, D.M.D. Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9655 Longswamp Rd, Mertztown, PA 19539 Phone: 610-682-6386 |
News Archive
The Miami Herald: The federal government is spending billions to make electronic medical records a standard feature of physician offices and hospitals, but the change is not without a cost — to doctors' balance sheets, and possibly to patient privacy.
According to the Institute of Medicine, the average American consumes 3,400 milligrams of sodium day, about 50 percent more than the daily sodium recommendation set by the 2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
Scientists from the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have identified dendritic antigen presenting cells in zebrafish, opening the possibility that the tiny fish could become a new model for studying the complexities of the human immune system.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) can disrupt the body's sensitive signaling mechanisms that control blood pressure, breathing, and oxygen delivery to the heart and other organs during changes in body position. Cardiovascular (CV) disease is a leading cause of illness and death following SCI, and changes in baroreflex sensitivity-the body's ability to detect and respond to changes in blood pressure-may be predictive of a CV event.
Researchers from Georgetown University Medical Center and American University have shown that, like humans, mustached bats use the left and right sides of their brains to process different aspects of sounds. Aside from humans, no other animal that has been studied, not even monkeys or apes, has proved to use such hemispheric specialization for sound processing - meaning that the left brain is better at processing fast sounds, and the right processing slow ones.
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