Mind Springs Health - Granby Clinic - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 244 E Agate Ave, Granby, CO 80446 Phone: 970-241-6023 |
Aspen Wind Counseling, Llc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 191 E. Agate, Granby, CO 80446 Phone: 970-531-0501 |
Slopeside Counseling Llc Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 55 First St, Granby, CO 80446 Phone: 970-439-3109 |
Mind Springs Health Inc And West Springs Health Inc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 244 E. Agate Ave, Granby, CO 80446 Phone: 970-887-2179 |
River View Counseling, Pllc Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 195 Third Street, Granby, CO 80446 Phone: 970-531-1996 Fax: 970-557-3170 |
Luna Counseling, Llc Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 191 East Agate Ave., Granby, CO 80446 Phone: 970-531-6173 Fax: 970-887-2293 |
News Archive
Researchers have used computational analysis to identify a new Achilles heel for the treatment of drug-resistant breast cancer. The results, which are published in Molecular Systems Biology, reveal that the disruption of glucose metabolism is an effective therapeutic strategy for the treatment of tumours that have acquired resistance to front-line cancer drugs such as Lapatinib.
Doctors in the U.S. and Japan have devised a way to treat atrial fibrillation by adding a little alcohol to minimally invasive therapies that target a cluster of misbehaving nerves known to trigger arrhythmia. In the most recent Journal of the American College of Cardiology (online before print), the researchers say the new therapy may dull or stop the transmission of electrical impulses that cause atrial fibrillation.
Scientists are warning that snakebites are a neglected threat - they say snakebites cause considerable death and injury worldwide and pose an important yet neglected threat to public health.
Patients who take clozapine, the most effective antipsychotic drug, have significantly higher rates of metabolic syndrome, according to a first-of-a-kind study by University of Rochester Medical Center researchers.
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