Amanda K Nelson, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 777 Sw Mill View Way Ste 100, Bend, OR 97702 Phone: 541-388-1022 |
Dr. Emily Borsting, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2450 Ne Mary Rose Pl Ste 205, Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-316-0627 |
Dr. Gary Lyle Gallagher, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 777 Sw Mill View Way Ste 250, Bend, OR 97702 Phone: 541-728-3184 |
Ivan Nicolas Vial, MD Plastic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2450 Ne Mary Rose Pl Ste 201, Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-317-0808 |
Dr. Linda Joann Leffel, MD Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1715 Sw Chandler Avenue, Suite 100, Bend, OR 97702 Phone: 541-388-3006 Fax: 541-382-7605 |
News Archive
An international group co-led by University of Alabama at Birmingham researcher Mary MacDougall, Ph.D., has unraveled the molecular basis for the rare, inherited genetic disorder, Singleton-Merten Syndrome (SMS). Individuals with SMS develop extreme, life-threatening calcification of the aorta and heart valves, early-onset periodontitis and root resorption of the teeth, decreases in bone density, and loss of bone tissue at the tips of fingers and toes.
Cord Blood America, Inc., the umbilical cord blood stem cell preservation company focused on bringing the life saving potential of stem cells to families nationwide and internationally, said today the focus of the Company on a go forward basis is to operate entirely off its own cash flow.
MR Solutions, with offices in the UK and Boston, will be showing their latest state of the art 3T to 9.4T superconducting, cryogen-free MRI imaging technology with optional PET and SPECT imaging modalities on stand 407 at the 16th annual World Preclinical Congress in Boston on June 13th to 15th. The congress focusses on the very latest trends and technologies impacting the preclinical drug discovery and development world.
In a study recently published in Nature University of Minnesota Medical School researchers found that senescent immune cells are the most dangerous type of senescent cell.
Creuztfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a rare but fatal disease in humans. For the first time, the presence of infectivity[1] in the blood of patients affected by sporadic and the new variant of CJD was established by scientists from the French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA) and the French National Veterinary School (ENVT), in collaboration with European partners.
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