Coastal Carolina Podiatry Inc Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4340 Ladson Rd, Suite C, Ladson, SC 29456 Phone: 843-851-9069 |
Flowertown Podiatry, Inc Podiatrist - Primary Podiatric Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4340 Ladson Rd Ste C, Ladson, SC 29456 Phone: 843-851-9069 |
Ms. Breelyn Nicole Miles, DPM Podiatrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4340 Ladson Rd Ste C, Ladson, SC 29456 Phone: 843-851-9069 Fax: 843-871-8248 |
News Archive
Medical device company Vertos Medical Inc. has announced the release of positive results from its U.S. IRB I Patient Outcomes Trial, a prospective, investigational review board-approved, 75-patient study of mild for the treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS). Six-week clinical data have shown that patients treated with mild experience statistically and clinically significant improvement in both pain and functional ability. The data also confirmed mild's safety, with no reports of patient complications related to the procedure or the devices.
Last year, Tina Holwin Hodges' healthy family switched to a high-deductible health insurance plan and were able to save $100 a month on their monthly premiums, which seemed like a bargain. Then her daughter Cailee spent three days in the hospital with a viral infection, her daughter Heather went in for a cardiac workup, her husband had hand surgery after being out of work for a year, and she injured her back and couldn't work for three months.
A new study released as a bioRxiv* preprint tried to establish how tissues such as the upper respiratory tract (URT) – which harbor the virus and often act as the point of entry – are difficult to access for routine testing, but are responsive to vaccination.
HIV-positive people who say religion is an important part of their lives are likely to have fewer sexual partners and engage in high-risk sexual behavior less frequently than other people with the virus that causes AIDS, according to a study issued today by the RAND Corporation.
Neuroscientists have long held that the brains of children thin down over time. However, this was on the basis of older imaging techniques. Now, using cutting-edge technology in the form of quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI), a team of researchers has found that the apparent thinning is due in part to myelin formation around the cortical nerve fibers. These very interesting findings, published in the journal PNAS on September 23, 2019, will drive further research on the link between cortical function and structure.
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