Mrs. Rajean Cooke, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7740 Avon Lake Rd, Lodi, OH 44254 Phone: 330-302-4318 |
Halle Shannen Gray-plute, Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7514 Friendsville Rd, Lodi, OH 44254 Phone: 330-416-5141 |
Yvonne Huffman, Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7774 Kennard Rd, Lodi, OH 44254 Phone: 330-241-0689 |
Mrs. Jill M Bagnall, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 Redfield St, Lodi, OH 44254 Phone: 330-242-6923 |
Ms. Janelle Gene Hodges, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 624 Highland Dr, 103a, Lodi, OH 44254 Phone: 330-241-7746 |
Joann Marie Arnold, L.P.N. Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7430 Avon Lake Rd, Lodi, OH 44254 Phone: 330-667-2449 |
News Archive
Magnetic stimulation of the brain improves working memory, offering a new potential avenue of therapy for individuals living with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia, according to new research from the Duke University School of Medicine.
Specific mutations (N676K) in the FLT3 receptor can contribute to the development of acute myeloid leukemia. The FLT3 receptor regulates cell growth, while activating gene mutations promote the uncontrolled proliferation of white blood cells. These findings were reported in the specialist journal Blood by a group of scientists from the Helmholtz Zentrum München and the Hospital of the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich as part of a clinical research collaboration with the German Cancer Consortium.
Human made chemical compounds called organohalogens get loads of attention as they are best known for their often harmful effect on the environment - substances like the CFCs (the ozone-damaging chemicals), dioxin (found in the herbicide Agent Orange), PCBs (industrial fluids) and several pesticides.
Notch proteins are key regulators of growth and differentiation of both normal and cancer cells. Researchers in Turku, Finland, have now demonstrated that the activities of distinct Notch family members are modified differently by phosphorylation.
Cancer Research UK scientists have discovered that a protein called Rac1 prompts pigment cells to sprout long 'legs' that could propel skin cancer cells, allowing them to spread, according to research published in Developmental Cell today.
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