Dr. Beverly Jue Smith, OD, MS, MBA, CPNP Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 215 Alamo Plz Ste D, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-202-2846 Fax: 925-648-1127 |
Site For Sight Optometry, Inc. Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 215 Alamo Plz Ste D, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-202-2846 Fax: 925-648-1127 |
Alamo Optometry Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 3201 Danville Blvd, Suite 165, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-820-6622 Fax: 925-820-5226 |
Poplar Spectacles Optometry, Inc. Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 215 Alamo Plz, Suite D, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-202-2846 Fax: 925-242-1243 |
Mei Lee Fleming, OD Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3201 Danville Blvd, Suite 165, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-820-6622 Fax: 925-820-5226 |
Shelley Mingwen Wu, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 215 Alamo Plz, #d, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-202-2846 |
Gregory Alexander Kraskowsky, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3201 Danville Blvd, Suite 165, Alamo, CA 94507 Phone: 925-820-6622 |
News Archive
Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have discovered a new and more accurate way to distinguish between harmful and harmless plaque in the blood vessels by using ultrasound. This can help healthcare providers determine the risk of strokes and heart attacks - which means avoiding unnecessary surgery for many patients.
Women's minds and genitals respond differently to sexual arousal, whereas in men, the responses of the body and mind are more in tune with each other, according to Assistant Professor Meredith Chivers, from Queen's University in Kingston, Canada, and her international collaborators, Michael Seto, Martin Lalumi-re, Ellen Laan, and Teresa Grimbos. Their meta-analysis1 of the extent of agreement between subjective ratings and physiological measures of sexual arousal in men and women is published online this week in Springer's journal Archives of Sexual Behavior.
Young women may think osteoporosis is an older person's problem but a new study at Griffith University is helping show them that prevention is better than cure.
In research led by a Saint Louis University investigator, molecular biologists have discovered a way to harness the enzyme thrombin's anti-blood clotting properties. The finding opens the door to new medications that will treat diseases related to thrombosis, the presence of blood clots in blood vessels, which is responsible for nearly a third of all deaths in the U.S.
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