Dr. Wanda Sinia Correa, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Ave. Santiago De Los Caballeros, Cfse, Ponce, PR 00733 Phone: 787-848-4545 Fax: 787-259-8659 |
Sindia Odette Alvarado Caraballo, Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: Metro Pavia Clinic - Ponce, 1943 Marina, Ponce, PR 00717 Phone: 787-635-8264 |
Dr. Sheila Waleska Colon, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3423 Calle Laffitte, Urb Punto Oro, Ponce, PR 00728 Phone: 787-841-3797 |
Dr. Grisselle Falu, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Ave. Santiago De Los Caballeros, Cfse, Ponce, PR 00733 Phone: 787-848-4545 Fax: 787-259-8659 |
Rafael Raymundo Cuebas-fernandez, Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Urb Jacaranda, Calle B, #d-5, Ponce, PR 00731 Phone: 787-376-0655 |
Dr. Ricardo Luis Colon, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: C24 Calle 3, Ponce, PR 00716 Phone: 787-840-0647 |
News Archive
Mission Pharmacal has announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Tindamax (tinidazole) for the treatment of bacterial vaginosis (BV), the most common vaginal infection among women of childbearing age in the United States.
Stem cell researchers at Emory University School of Medicine have made an advance toward having a long-lasting "repair caulk" for blood vessels. The research could form the basis of a treatment for peripheral artery disease, derived from a patient's own cells. Their results were recently published in the journal Circulation.
The neurological disorder Huntington's disease causes behavioral and motor changes, which among other things are a result of dysfunctional maturation or formation of glial cells, the brain's support cells, researchers from the University of Copenhagen demonstrate in a new study based on mice trials.
The life-threatening condition depicts the fact that the body does not have enough energy to function. Scientists at the University of Cambridge say mutations in the AKT2 gene are to blame. Writing in the journal Science, they say there are already cancer drugs which target a similar process.
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