Foot & Ankle Center Podiatrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1301 Bertha Howe Ave Ste 6, Mesquite, NV 89027 Phone: 702-346-5227 |
Landon T Cameron, DPM Podiatrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1301 Bertha Howe Ave Ste 6, Mesquite, NV 89027 Phone: 702-346-5227 |
The Foot & Ankle Institute Llc Podiatrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 340 Falcon Ridge Pkwy, Building 300, Suite A, Mesquite, NV 89027 Phone: 702-346-7678 Fax: 702-346-1623 |
News Archive
Navigating the Challenges of Meaningful Use to Identify Benefits, March 31, 2010, 2 p.m. CT, a Webinar hosted by Informatics Corporation of America, will explore how to practically implement a community-wide solution that assists its healthcare participants to achieve the proposed American Recovery and Reinvestment Act's criteria for meaningful use and bridge gaps in the adoption of electronic health records by its provider community.
Breast cancer, even at its initial stages, could be detected earlier and more accurately than current techniques using blood samples and a unique proteomics-based technology, according to findings of a study led by the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), an affiliate of City of Hope.
InterMune today announced that the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine (AJRCCM) published results from a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled Phase II trial evaluating pirfenidone for the treatment of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).
A UCSF-led team has developed a technique to build tiny models of human tissues, called organoids, more precisely than ever before using a process that turns human cells into a biological equivalent of LEGO bricks. These mini-tissues in a dish can be used to study how particular structural features of tissue affect normal growth or go awry in cancer. They could be used for therapeutic drug screening and to help teach researchers how to grow whole human organs.
Pseudogenes, a sub-class of long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) that developed from the genome's 20,000 protein-coding genes but lost the ability to produce proteins, have long been considered nothing more than genomic "junk." Yet the retention of these 20,000 mysterious remnants during evolution has suggested that they may in fact possess biological functions and contribute to the development of disease.
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