Dr. Hasemeier & Associates Social Worker - Clinical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 849 Lakeshore Dr, Dandridge, TN 37725 Phone: 423-736-0264 |
Preserve Health And Wellness Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 872 Highway 92 S, Dandridge, TN 37725 Phone: 865-484-4321 |
Caring Minds, Llc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 914 Industrial Park Rd, Dandridge, TN 37725 Phone: 865-246-2104 |
Tennessee Community Health Services, Inc. Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 882 Highway 92 S, Dandridge, TN 37725 Phone: 865-397-9889 Fax: 865-397-9665 |
Lakeside Of The Smokies Counseling Pllc Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1121 Hill St, Dandridge, TN 37725 Phone: 865-333-2654 |
News Archive
A healthy motor neuron needs to transport its damaged components from the nerve-muscle connection all the way back to the cell body in the spinal cord. If it cannot, the defective components pile up and the cell becomes sick and dies. Researchers at the NIH's National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke have learned how a mutation in the gene for superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1), which causes ALS, leads cells to accumulate damaged materials.
Johns Hopkins neurologists report success with a new means of getting rid of potentially lethal blood clots in the brain safely without cutting through easily damaged brain tissue or removing large pieces of skull. The minimally invasive treatment, they report, increased the number of patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) who could function independently by 10 to 15 percent six months following the procedure.
After struggling with anxiety and depression since her teens, Lana Berry hit bottom at age 26. Divorced, unemployed and back living with her parents, she found herself in a dark place-"as sick as I'd ever been."
Scientists here are the first to demonstrate that the link between diesel fume exposure and cancer lies in the ability of diesel exhaust to induce the growth of new blood vessels that serve as a food supply for solid tumors.
Diagnosing the presence of Yersinia pestis, the cause of plague, may soon be easier than ever before. Scientists working with Peter Seeberger, Director at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces (MPIKG) in Potsdam and Professor at the Freie Universit-t Berlin, have come up with a simple, inexpensive and reliable method of detecting the bacterium.
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