Mr. Benjamin Wade Bruestle, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3325 Pocahontas Rd, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-523-1797 Fax: 541-523-1799 |
Rebecca Jarnes, Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 3325 Pocahontas Rd, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-523-6461 Fax: 541-523-8151 |
David Eugene Loper, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3325 Pocahontas Road, St Elizabeth Health Services, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-523-8838 Fax: 541-823-8107 |
News Archive
It's considered a rite of passage among young people - acting out their independence through heavy, episodic drinking. But a new University of Cincinnati study, the first of its kind nationally, is showing how binge drinking among adolescents and young adults could be causing serious damage to a brain that's still under development at this age.
According to Donna's doctor, Kris DiNucci, DPM, FACFAS, a Fellow of the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons, the conditions plaguing her are common among court-playing athletes. "Because playing tennis requires quick, repetitive foot movements and continuous forefoot pressure, neuromas, (a thickening of the nerve tissue in the foot from compression) are common," DiNucci says. "In addition, those same movements can cause athletes to develop plantar fasciitis, an inflammation of the strong ligament that extends from the heel to the toes," he added.
According to a meta-analysis of three randomized controlled trials published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases, zinc acetate lozenges may increase the rate of recovery from the common cold three fold. On the fifth day, 70% of the zinc lozenge patients had recovered compared with 27% of the placebo patients.
It turns out that in the rush to invent new drugs to treat cancers, scientists may have overlooked some obvious possibilities of existing drugs currently being used for other diseases. A new study says that therapies for diabetes, inflammation and alcoholism, and even for dog arthritis, can also result in the successful killing of cancer cells in culture.
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