Keith Patti, PHARM Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 444 Sw Center St, Faison, NC 28341 Phone: 910-718-5200 |
Heather Lynette Maynor, PHARM.D. Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 444 Sw Center St, Faison, NC 28341 Phone: 910-718-5200 Fax: 910-718-5080 |
Dr. Wendy Ann Alvanos, PHARM D Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 206 South West Center Street, Faison, NC 28341 Phone: 910-267-0080 Fax: 910-267-0082 |
Dr. David Brendan Dearie, PHARM.D. Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 206 S.w. Center St., Faison, NC 28341 Phone: 910-267-0080 Fax: 910-267-0082 |
News Archive
A Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel yesterday recommended the approval of Orexigen Therapeutics' weight loss drug Contrave. This is the first time a weight loss drug has received the nod. The vote went 13 to 7 for Contrave's approval and 11 to 8, with an abstention that additional studies be conducted on heart risks. Although experts agree to risks they believe the benefits outweigh the risks. Although the FDA is not compelled to go with the panel's recommendation, it more often than not does. The FDA will deliver its verdict by Jan. 31 2011.
New research published this week in Nature has found several drugs could lead to new treatment options for multiple sclerosis (MS), including two drugs that effectively treat MS at the source, in vivo. When administered at the peak of disease, these two drugs showed a striking reversal of disease severity.
Turmeric, a key ingredient in spicy curry dishes, has long been known to have medicinal values. Now new research finds a substance in turmeric, curcumin, may provide lasting protection against potentially deadly lung damage in premature infants.
A half-billion years ago, vertebrates lacked the ability to chew their food. They did not have jaws. Instead, their heads consisted of a flexible, fused basket of cartilage.This week, an international team of researchers led by a faculty member from the University of Colorado at Boulder published evidence that three genes in jawless vertebrates might have been key to the development of jaws in higher vertebrates.
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