Ramon Hernandez Reyes, PHARMACIST Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Bo Caguitas Centro Carr 794 Km 2.0, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-7900 Fax: 787-732-6658 |
Karleen Ramos Vazquez Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Carr 173 Km 20.4 Bo Sumidero Sec La Capilla, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-242-3537 |
Mr. Michael Diaz-guzman, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Carr 156 Km 49.0, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-4799 Fax: 787-732-4799 |
Brenda Montes, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3 Calle Salas Torres, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-2241 Fax: 787-732-2241 |
Dorian Bracetty Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3 Calle Salas Torres, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-2241 Fax: 787-732-2241 |
Mr. Federico V Garcia Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 34 Calle Munoz Rivera, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-7744 |
Pilar Angelica Quintana Baucage, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Calle Rafael Laza #39, Aguas Buenas, PR 00725 Phone: 787-560-3284 |
Mrs. Nayda Ivette Medina Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Rafael Lasa # 44, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-2272 Fax: 787-732-3877 |
Maria M Rivera, LIC Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Apartado 349, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-704-7267 |
Marigza De Jesus Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 31 Calle Rafael Lasa, Aguas Buenas, PR 00703 Phone: 787-732-3131 Fax: 787-732-1390 |
News Archive
Treating obese mice with catestatin, a peptide naturally occurring in the body, showed significant improvement in glucose and insulin tolerance and reduced body weight, report University of California San Diego School of Medicine researchers.
Several clinical studies have shown that taking the anti-inflammatory drug celecoxib can reduce the risk of developing polyps that lead to colon cancers, at the cost of increasing the risk of heart disease. But what if this tradeoff was not necessary?
Boosting the body's own disease-fighting immune pathway could provide answers in the desperate search for new treatments for tuberculosis.
Clinical researchers at Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) can now answer the question that baffles many clinicians - why do some men with elevated prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels who are carefully monitored and undergo repeated negative biopsies still develop aggressive prostate cancer?
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