Mrs. Erin A Tobin, CNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 405 Whittecar Ave, Gregory, SD 57533 Phone: 605-835-9611 Fax: 605-835-8033 |
Susan M Hogue, C.N.P Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 405 Whittecar Ave, Gregory, SD 57533 Phone: 605-835-9611 Fax: 605-835-8033 |
Mrs. Megan Jo Heyden, CNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 405 Whittecar Ave, Gregory, SD 57533 Phone: 605-835-9611 |
Rachele J Lyons, CNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 405 Whittecar Ave, Gregory, SD 57533 Phone: 605-835-9611 Fax: 605-835-8033 |
News Archive
A new method of filming blood-vessel cells that move in accordance with targeted signals has been developed by researchers at Uppsala University in collaboration with researchers at the University of California.
In related discoveries with far-reaching implications for treating diabetes and understanding hypertension, University of Utah researchers have learned why thiazolidinediones (TZDs), a major anti-diabetes drug, cause edema and also have found a new pathway critical to fluid metabolism. Identification of this pathway may help understand fundamental mechanisms of blood pressure control.
No matter the trigger - bug bites, a medication side-effect or an itchy wound - the urge to scratch can be a real pain. Researchers at the Duke University Medical Center have identified a potential drug target in the skin for that itchy feeling.
Alexander Finlayson, Katherine Hudson and Faisal Ali, all affiliates of MedicineAfrica, a social enterprise providing a platform for health care educational and research partnerships between Northern and Southern collaborators, write in a SciDev.Net opinion piece, "Health scientists in developing countries can use social media to tackle research priorities, ... building networks and sharing the knowledge needed to make strategic progress towards strengthening health systems.
Dentists could significantly increase the number of patients they see during the pandemic by switching the drills they use, according to new research.
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