Julie M Powell, OD Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1170 Jordan Lake St, Lake Odessa, MI 48849 Phone: 616-374-3284 Fax: 616-374-2020 |
John P. Hemming, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1170 Jordan Lake St, Lake Odessa, MI 48849 Phone: 616-374-3284 Fax: 616-374-2020 |
Lo Eye Care Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1170 Jordan Lake St, Lake Odessa, MI 48849 Phone: 616-374-3284 Fax: 616-374-2020 |
News Archive
A new study shows that exposure to bright light may ease symptoms of depression in elderly people. The researchers tried three weeks of bright light therapy using specially designed light boxes and saw that it improved symptoms of depression by as much as 54% in older adults with depression. The light therapy also improved sleep and optimized levels of the neurotransmitter serotonin. Low levels of serotonin are associated with depression and often targeted by antidepressant drugs. This is the first study of its kind to show a beneficial effect of bright light therapy on treating depression in the elderly with non-seasonal major depressive disorder.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared for marketing a new source plasma collection system developed by Fenwal, Inc., the company announced today. Called the Aurora plasmapheresis system, the new device can support two-way, wireless data communication designed to eliminate manual steps and increase operator and donor satisfaction.
Pregnant women living near the World Trade Center during 9/11 experienced higher-than-normal negative birth outcomes, according to a new working paper by Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
Yale School of Medicine has launched a state-of-the-art database funded in part by the National Library of Medicine, called the Canary Database, containing scientific evidence about how animal disease events can be an early warning system for emerging human diseases.
As anyone familiar with the X-Men knows, mutants can be either very good or very bad - or somewhere in between. The same appears true within cancer cells, which may harbor hundreds of mutations that set them apart from other cells in the body; the scientific challenge has been to figure out which mutations are culprits and which are innocent bystanders.
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