Mr. Stephen Edwin Parey, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 927 N James Campbell Blvd, Suite 101, Columbia, TN 38401 Phone: 931-380-9166 Fax: 931-388-4105 |
Dr. Shaun C Corbin, MD Otolaryngology - Sleep Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 927 N James Campbell Blvd, Ste 101, Columbia, TN 38401 Phone: 931-380-9166 Fax: 931-388-4105 |
Dr. William Robert Stewart Jr., M.D. Otolaryngology - Plastic Surgery within the Head & Neck Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1609 Rosewood Dr, Columbia, TN 38401 Phone: 931-381-0831 Fax: 931-380-0750 |
News Archive
Ligand Pharmaceuticals Incorporated today announced that multiple clinical studies of dinaciclib (SCH 727965) will be presented by Merck at the upcoming 52nd American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting being held in Orlando, Florida at the Orange County Convention Center, December 4-7, 2010.
Compared to the average three year life span of a common rat, the 10 to 30 year life of the naked mole rat, a subterranean rodent native to East Africa, is impressive. And compared to the human body, the body of this rodent shows little decline due to aging, maintaining high activity, bone health, reproductive capacity, and cognitive ability throughout its lifetime. Now a collaborative of researchers in Israel and the United States is working to uncover the secret to the small mammal's long - and active - lifespan.
Integrated Environmental Technologies, Ltd. announces that Benchmark Performance Group, Inc., its exclusive worldwide distributor serving the oil and gas industry, has completed the expansion of its Excelyte® manufacturing plant at its Midland, Texas facility.
Bacteria can talk to each other via molecules they themselves produce. The phenomenon is called quorum sensing, and is important when an infection propagates. Now, researchers at Link-ping University in Sweden are showing how bacteria control processes in human cells the same way.
Physicians often ask their patients to "Please stick out your tongue". The tongue can betray signs of illness, which combined with other symptoms such as a cough, fever, presence of jaundice, headache or bowel habits, can help the physician offer a diagnosis. For people in remote areas who do not have ready access to a physician, a new diagnostic system is reported in the International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology that works to combine the soft inputs of described symptoms with a digital analysis of an image of the patient's tongue.
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