Spex Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 890 William Hilton Pkwy, Suite 93, Hilton Head, SC 29928 Phone: 843-681-2020 |
Hilton Head Family Eyecare Inc Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1513 Main Street Village, Hilton Head, SC 29926 Phone: 843-689-3015 |
Palmetto Eye Specialists-optometrists Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 220 Pembroke Dr, Hilton Head, SC 29926 Phone: 843-785-5398 Fax: 843-785-5394 |
Dr. James D Kondor, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 10 Hospital Center Cmns, Ste. 100, Hilton Head, SC 29926 Phone: 843-681-6682 Fax: 843-681-9582 |
News Archive
A high-amplitude, and often painful, electrical shock is the only currently available method for treating certain cases of chronic cardiac arrhythmia. But now a new technique using much weaker impulses has been developed by an international team of physicists and cardiologists, including Alain Pumir, CNRS researcher at the ENS Lyon physics laboratory.
Citing a review by Telegraph correspondent Rob Crilly criticizing the film Zero Dark Thirty "for getting its facts wrong about the CIA vaccination campaign that sought to confirm the DNA of Osama bin Laden's children," development blogger Tom Murphy writes in the Humanosphere blog, "Crilly's larger point is to say that the film gives further ammo to polio vaccine conspiracy theorists."
Increasing oxygen delivery to muscles can help athletes perform better and give them the edge needed to win elite competitions. One of the best ways to increase oxygen supply is through blood manipulation, undergoing a blood transfusion that provides extra red blood cells and boosts oxygen levels.
Singapore's Agency for Science, Technology and Research and Switzerland's Cytos Biotechnology AG today announced that the first healthy volunteer has been dosed in a Phase 1 clinical trial with their H1N1 influenza vaccine candidate based on Cytos' proprietary bacteriophage Qbeta virus-like particle technology.
People can be encouraged to walk for up to 30-60 minutes more per week if they are given the right kind of help, finds a study published on bmj.com.
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