Ryanne Gatti Lmft Pllc Clinic - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1153 Main St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-368-0124 |
Barbara Forstberg Lcsw Llc Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 21 Bread And Milk St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-742-3040 |
Bethany Sauline Lpc Pllc Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1153 Main St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-281-1301 |
Root & Bloom Therapy Llc Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1153 Main St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-375-0374 |
Sarah Zalewski Llc Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1153 Main St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-249-1697 |
Shante Powers Gaskins Lcsw Llc Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 49 Frederick Dr, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-580-9631 |
Chastity J. Pimental Lcsw, Pllc Social Worker - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1153 Main St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-336-8148 |
Chattersoupe, Pllc Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1153 Main St, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-734-5229 |
Martha Michaud Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 881 Swamp Rd, Coventry, CT 06238 Phone: 860-929-0061 |
News Archive
Baltimore, MD. The recent findings reported in Nature (March 11, 2004) by Jonathon Tilly's group at Harvard Medical School, show that female mice produce stem cells that give rise to eggs. This result overturns previous notions about mammalian reproduction, which held that females are born with all the eggs that they will ever have and that the decline in egg quality that occurs after a certain age is due to an extended aging process. What mammalian research has not been able to address at this point, however, is how these stem cells operate, what prompts them to develop into eggs, and why they are eventually lost. To answer these questions we must turn to our cousin the fruitfly.
Scientists at the Duke Cancer Institute have identified a molecular key that breast cancer cells use to invade bone marrow in mice, where they may be protected from chemotherapy or hormonal therapies that could otherwise eradicate them.
Women who overcome breast cancer have every reason to celebrate. But a heart filled with joy may also be a heart damaged by life-saving cancer therapies, a growing body of research shows.
A new article published in the journal PLOS Pathogens on October 10, 2019, claims that the common rotavirus may be responsible for the occurrence of type 1 diabetes, a form of diabetes which occurs in children and is due to destruction of the pancreatic islet cells that produce the hormone insulin to normalize blood glucose levels.
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