Lara K Wheeler, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 841 Central St Ste 101, Franklin, NH 03235 Phone: 603-934-1464 Fax: 603-934-1465 |
Hala S Tabbah, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 125 South Main Street, Franklin, NH 03235 Phone: 603-934-4259 Fax: 603-934-1219 |
Dr. Mark David Weinreb, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 446 Central St, Franklin, NH 03235 Phone: 603-934-7334 Fax: 603-934-7711 |
Joann Lopez-valles, MD Pediatrics - Adolescent Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 125 S Main St, Franklin, NH 03235 Phone: 603-934-4259 Fax: 603-934-1219 |
News Archive
A team of researchers led by Sander Herfst from Erasmus University Medical Center in The Netherlands suggests severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) could spread through the air at a one-meter distance and cause infection in a new ferret model study.
ethica Clinical Research Inc. ("ethica"), a Contract Research Organization (CRO) headquartered in Montreal, and Matrix Pharma Canada Inc. ("Matrix Pharma"), have announced the signing of an agreement, valued at CAD1.25 Million, that provides ethica with an exclusive, worldwide license to promote and use Matrix Pharma's proprietary research data analysis technology for life sciences applications, notably for the identification and optimization of biomarkers.
Researchers at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center have announced the findings of a large-scale clinical trial for patients with late-stage heart failure. Results showed that cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) from implantable pacemaker-like devices or CRT combined with an implantable defibrillator (CRT-D), when used in addition to optimal drug therapy, reduced significantly the mortality and first hospitalization rate when compared to drug therapy alone. CRT-D also substantially lowered mortality.
Pregnant women with low-back pain and pelvic pain could benefit from a multimodal approach of musculoskeletal and obstetric management, say researchers.
When a coronavirus-including SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19-infects someone, it hijacks the person's cells, co-opting their molecular machinery for its own survival and spread.
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