Chelsea Shell, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 320 Bristol West Blvd Bldg 1, Bristol, TN 37620 Phone: 423-844-1399 |
Amanda Horn, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 320 Bristol West Blvd Ste 2c, Bristol, TN 37620 Phone: 423-844-1399 |
Nyela Aldridge Edwards, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 320 Bristol West Blvd Ste 2c, Bristol, TN 37620 Phone: 423-844-1399 |
Meredith Condrey Montgomery, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 320 Bristol West Blvd Ste 2c, Bristol, TN 37620 Phone: 423-844-1399 Fax: 423-844-1397 |
Cassie Swayne, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 320 Bristol West Blvd Ste 2c, Bristol, TN 37620 Phone: 423-844-1399 |
News Archive
Neuronal Ceroid Liposfuscinosis (NCL), often referred to as Batten disease, is a rare and fatal neurodegenerative disorder that afflicts infants and young children. NCL is caused by a deficiency of a lysosomal enzyme, and is a relatively rare disease, affecting an estimated 2 to 4 of every 100,000 babies born in the U.S. Although NCLs are classified as rare diseases, they often affect more than one child in families that carry the defective gene, and tragically, are always fatal.
Using a breakthrough technology, researchers led by a Weill Cornell Medical College scientist have pinpointed the hormone estrogen as a key player in about half of all prostate cancers.
Scientists in Singapore have re-engineered a harmless strain of bacteria to fight another common, drug-resistant microbe that spreads in hospitals and is deadly to patients with weak immune systems.
University of California, Irvine researchers have identified a specific mutation that allows melanoma tumor cells to remain undetected by the immune system.
That smaller islands will typically sustain fewer species than large ones is a widespread pattern in nature. Now a team of researchers shows that smaller area will mean not only fewer species, but also shorter food chains. This implies that plant and animal communities on small islands may work differently from those on large ones.
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