Emily Marie Lemus, PHARMACIST Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10 North River Drive, Fort Yates, ND 58538 Phone: 701-854-3831 |
Christopher Nguyen Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10 North River Road, Fort Yates, ND 58538 Phone: 701-854-8340 |
Thuytien Nguyen, PHARM.D. Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10 N River Rd, Fort Yates, ND 58538 Phone: 701-854-8340 |
Kelsey Mauch, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10 N River Road, Fort Yates, ND 58538 Phone: 701-854-8340 |
News Archive
Researchers at UC Davis have shown how the innate immune system distinguishes between dangerous pathogens and friendly microbes. Like burglars entering a house, hostile bacteria give themselves away by breaking into cells. However, sensing proteins instantly detect the invasion, triggering an alarm that mobilizes the innate immune response.
Bacteria know that they are too small to make an impact individually. So they wait, they multiply, and then they engage in behaviors that are only successful when all cells participate in unison. There are hundreds of behaviors that bacteria carry out in such communities. Now researchers at Rockefeller University have discovered one that has never been observed or described before in a living system.
A team of cancer specialists from OncoLink.org, the award-winning cancer Web-based resource of the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania, has launched OncoLife, the first and only individualized plan-of-care based on the national Institute of Medicine's recommendations for adult cancer survivors.
Although women generally have worse knee function and more severe symptoms before undergoing surgery for knee replacement than men, they recover faster after the operation. Men take longer to recover but, after a year, they catch up with women and there are no differences in surgery outcomes at that time.
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