Dr. Vincent De Francisco, OD Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 74927 Us Highway 111, Indian Wells, CA 92210 Phone: 760-568-2340 |
Family Eye Care Of Indian Wells Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 74785 Us Highway 111, #207, Indian Wells, CA 92210 Phone: 760-340-5292 Fax: 760-773-5082 |
Dr. Richard Vandyke Packard, O.D. Optometrist - Corneal and Contact Management Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 74927 Us Highway 111, Indian Wells, CA 92210 Phone: 760-568-2340 Fax: 866-529-1713 |
News Archive
Stressful upbringings can leave imprints on the genes of children as young as age 9, according to a study led by Princeton University and Pennsylvania State University researchers. Such chronic stress during youth leads to physiological weathering similar to aging.
Researchers have developed a ground-breaking procedure that could avoid the need for transplant patients to spend the rest of their lives taking a cocktail of drugs to stop their system from rejecting their new organ, according to a series of papers in the August issue of Transplant International.
A newly accessible vaccine against Japanese encephalitis (JE) is going to make the protection of more children in developing countries easier. The vaccine, manufactured in China, only needs to be given in one dose, it can be used for infants, and it is less expensive than other Japanese encephalitis vaccines.
A study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that a new drug for Huntington's disease - pridopidine or dopamine stabiliser ACR16 - might operate via previously unknown mechanisms of action. Researchers have found that at very low concentrations, ACR16 binds to the sigma-1 receptor, a protein in the brain important to neuronal function and survival.
In this Forbes opinion piece, John Lechleiter, president and chief executive officer of Eli Lilly and Company, examines the business of counterfeit medicines, writing, "With global sales last year estimated as high as $200 billion, counterfeit medicine is big business, and it's growing."
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