Dr. Emily Grace Lineberger, CNM, WHNP Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 584 Hospital Dr, Suite B, Bolivia, NC 28422 Phone: 630-740-6161 |
Sarah Beth Koenigseker, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 584 Hospital Dr Ne Unit B, Bolivia, NC 28422 Phone: 910-721-4050 Fax: 910-721-4051 |
Denise Anna-marie Davies, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 584 Hospital Dr Ne Unit B, Bolivia, NC 28422 Phone: 910-721-4050 Fax: 910-721-4051 |
Kiya Nichole Fox, Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 584 Hospital Dr Ne Unit B, Bolivia, NC 28422 Phone: 910-721-4050 Fax: 910-721-4051 |
News Archive
Researchers at UCSD and UC Irvine have captured on video for the first time chemical signals that traverse human cells in response to tiny mechanical jabs, like waves spreading from pebbles tossed into a pond. The scientists released the videos and technical details that explain how the visualization effect was created as part of a paper published in the April 21 issue of Nature.
People who have a birthweight over 10 pounds are twice as likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis when they are adults compared to individuals born with an average birthweight, according to a study published by researchers from Hospital for Special Surgery online in advance of print in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. While the mechanism for this association is unclear, the study identifies a potentially modifiable risk factor and highlights a potential way to decrease the incidence of the disease.
A single dose of an investigational anti-inflammatory drug called inclacumab considerably reduces damage to heart muscle during angioplasty (the opening of a blocked artery), according to a recent international clinical trial spearheaded by Dr. Jean-Claude Tardif, Director of the Research Centre at the Montreal Heart Institute, affiliated with the University of Montreal.
A new study has shown that stem cells could heal scars caused by old heart attacks. In all eight patients who received the experimental treatment in an ongoing clinical trial this therapy worked. All of them had suffered heart attacks an average of 5 1/2 years prior; one of the patients had his heart attack 11 years earlier.
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