Dr. Jonathan Dean Fay, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2640 Biehn St Ste 3, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 Phone: 541-884-3148 Fax: 541-884-3373 |
Dr. Scott Kenneth Stevens, MD Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2640 Biehn St., Suite 3, Klamath Ophthalmology, Pc Dba Klamath Eye Center, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 Phone: 541-884-3148 |
Teresa Roleen Graham, MD Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 Pine St, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 Phone: 541-883-1998 Fax: 541-850-5226 |
Dr. Daniel Orville Benson, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2615 Almond St, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 Phone: 541-883-3688 Fax: 541-883-3687 |
Dr. Mark Terrence Fay, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2640 Biehn St, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 Phone: 541-884-3148 Fax: 541-884-3373 |
News Archive
A team from the Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Biomedical Engineering Research Centre (CREB) of the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. BarcelonaTech (UPC) has developed an active knee-ankle orthosis to assist gait in people with incomplete spinal cord injury. The project is being carried out in collaboration with the University of A Coruña and the University of Extremadura.
Thomas Jefferson University received a National Institutes of Health (NIH) $4.8 million grant to test a new rabies vaccine with the potential to cure the virus infection, even after it has made its way into a person's central nervous system (CNS). Today, if an unvaccinated person is infected with rabies and it spreads to the brain, there is little chance for survival.
Making muscles burn more fat and less glucose can increase exercise endurance, but could simultaneously cause diabetes, says a team of scientists from Baylor College of Medicine and other institutions.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute researchers have discovered a novel way in which the brain size of developing mammals may be regulated. They have identified a signaling pathway that controls the orientation in which dividing neural progenitor cells are cleaved during development.
On January 31, 2019, an 11-year old boy in Japan went to a medical clinic with a fever. The providers there diagnosed him with influenza, a strain called H3N2, and sent him home with a new medication called baloxavir.
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