Mrs. Rosemary Mayer Hintz, MFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 363 La Cuesta Dr, Portola Valley, CA 94028 Phone: 650-270-1606 |
Mackenzie Lauren Froeberg, MA Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3130 Alpine Rd Ste 180, Portola Valley, CA 94028 Phone: 650-827-5600 |
Ms. Joann Marie Loulan, M.A. Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 151 Los Trancos Cir, Portola Valley, CA 94028 Phone: 650-851-5778 Fax: 650-851-7695 |
Jia Rebecca Li, LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3130 Alpine Road, Ste 288- 226, Portola Valley, CA 94028 Phone: 650-701-3123 |
News Archive
Medical device pioneer Stentys announced today that the first patient has been enrolled into the ‘APPOSITION II' clinical study—a randomized trial comparing the Stentys self-expanding stent with a conventional balloon-expandable stent in AMI patients. The primary endpoint of the ‘APPOSITION II' study is stent strut apposition at day three post-procedure via extremely high-resolution OCT (optical coherence tomography) imaging.
A landmark study from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) reports that your chance of developing epilepsy at some point in your life is one in 26. Onset is highest in children and older adults. But epilepsy knows no boundaries—it can strike at any age and across all socio-economic levels and ethnicities. There is no known cure and one-third of people with epilepsy have treatment-resistant or refractory epilepsy.
Trevena, Inc. (NASDAQ:TRVN) today announced positive results from its Phase 1 trial of TRV734, which Trevena is developing with the goal of providing improved analgesia while avoiding gastrointestinal and respiratory side effects typically associated with opioids.
Insulin-secreting pancreatic islet cells have been generated from human spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) directly isolated from human testicular tissue, researchers reported today at the American Association of Cell Biology 50th Annual Meeting in Philadelphia.
Part of the reason tuberculosis-causing bacteria are so good at colonizing the human body is that they have defenses against the body's immune system.
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