Dr. Kyle Shigeru Matsumura, MD Pain Medicine - Interventional Pain Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6750 S Highland Drive, Ste 100, Cottonwood Heights, UT 84121 Phone: 801-685-7246 Fax: 801-747-5487 |
Dr. Arun Rajagopal, M.D. Pain Medicine - Interventional Pain Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6750 S Highland Drive, Suite 100, Cottonwood Heights, UT 84121 Phone: 801-685-7246 |
News Archive
The increasing use of video games is often blamed for children's lack of interest in physical activity, but a study by the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, recently published in the Games for Health Journal suggests that active video games may actually be a source of moderate or intense physical activity in children five to eight years old.
In a new study, infants averaging six months of age who exhibited positional plagiocephaly (flat head syndrome) had lower scores than typical infants in observational tests used to evaluate cognitive and motor development. Positional or deformational plagiocephaly may occur when external forces shape an infant's skull while it is still soft and malleable, such as extended time spent lying on a hard surface or in one position. This is the first controlled study to suggest that babies who have flattened areas on the back of their heads during the first year of life may be at risk for developmental delay.
White heart transplant patients under the age of 18 are more than twice as likely to be alive a decade after surgery as their African-American counterparts, new Johns Hopkins research suggests.
Jiangbo Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a pharmaceutical company with its principal operations in the People's Republic of China, today announced that it has reached a settlement with the holder of its November 2007 Debenture and with the holders of its May 2008 Notes under which the Company has agreed to issue to such holders a total of 886,277 shares of its common stock as a payment for all delinquent interest and associated penalties with respect to its November 2007 Debenture and May 2008 Notes.
A new study has uncovered a problem in pediatrics thought to be a major issue only in adult medicine: pressure ulcers.
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