Mr. Bryan Standley Poe, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 406 S Park Ave, Aztec, NM 87410 Phone: 505-334-2852 Fax: 505-334-9266 |
Shermann Samala Singleton, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 120 Llano St, Aztec, NM 87410 Phone: 505-334-3404 Fax: 505-609-2259 |
Dr. William R Barkman, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 102 Llano Street, Aztec, NM 87410 Phone: 505-334-9441 Fax: 505-334-8750 |
News Archive
National Health Investors, Inc. announced today it has closed a $28.25 million purchase/leaseback transaction with Bickford Senior Living and its affiliates involving four assisted living facilities in Michigan and one in Illinois. The assisted living communities are two to three years old totaling 216 units and attract 100% private payment for services.
One single molecule determines how stem cells in the hair follicle develop. A study at the Sahlgrenska Academy at Göteborg University in Sweden has shown that cells that should give rise to hair can instead give rise to mammary gland cells in mice who lack this molecule.
As part of an unprecedented national effort to develop new drugs to treat neurological disorders, scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have been awarded an innovative grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to help people break their addiction to nicotine.
Difficult-to-study diseases such as Alzheimer's, schizophrenia, and autism now can be probed more safely and effectively thanks to an innovative new method for obtaining mature brain cells called neurons from reprogrammed skin cells. According to Gong Chen, the Verne M. Willaman Chair in Life Sciences and professor of biology at Penn State University and the leader of the research team, "the most exciting part of this research is that it offers the promise of direct disease modeling, allowing for the creation, in a Petri dish, of mature human neurons that behave a lot like neurons that grow naturally in the human brain."
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