Advanced Foot & Ankle Podiatrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1811 W Royal Hunte Dr, Suite 2, Cedar City, UT 84720 Phone: 435-586-2225 Fax: 435-867-1909 |
Dr. Brad Scott Webb, D.P.M. Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1811 W Royal Hunte Dr Ste 2, Cedar City, UT 84720 Phone: 435-586-2225 Fax: 435-867-1909 |
Dr. Gary W Clark, DPM Podiatrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 166 W 1325 N, Suite 300, Cedar City, UT 84721 Phone: 435-867-8521 Fax: 435-586-4073 |
Gary W Clark Dpm A Professional Corp Podiatrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 166 W 1325 N, Suite 300, Cedar City, UT 84720 Phone: 435-867-8521 |
Dr. Russell G Olsen, DPM Podiatrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1811 W Royal Hunte Dr, Suite 2, Cedar City, UT 84720 Phone: 435-586-2225 Fax: 435-867-1909 |
Meta Foot And Ankle Pc Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1811 W Royal Hunte Dr, Suite 2, Cedar City, UT 84720 Phone: 435-586-2225 Fax: 435-867-1909 |
News Archive
A study has shown that a single infusion of Gilead Sciences' drug AmBisome, known generically as iposomal amphotericin B, cured nearly all patients with visceral leishmaniasis, or kala-azar, a parasitic infection, Reuters reports.
We are at the point of paradigm shift in treating stroke victims. High tech solutions are about to bring improvements that have been unthinkable. Bionik Laboratories is a pioneer in the field with a clear path to extraordinary growth.
Mutations in the p63 protein lead to a number of disorders, but none is as severe as the AEC syndrome. Scientists at Goethe University Frankfurt in collaboration with a research group from the University of Naples Federico II have now discovered that this syndrome resembles diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's or ALS more closely than it does other p63-based syndromes.
Using laboratory mice that had been bred to have brain changes similar to Alzheimer's disease, scientists were able to reduce two characteristic features of the disease by modifying the mice's immune systems with a special peptide (MOG45D) related to the myelin sheath that insulates nerve cells and nerve fibers. As a result, anti-inflammatory cells were recruited from the blood into the brain, dampening the local inflammatory response.
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