Sienna Medical Corporation Internal Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6425 Lynch Cyn Blvd, Lake Isabella, CA 93240 Phone: 760-379-8630 Fax: 760-379-7658 |
Mesa Chiropractic Clinic/Center Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2810 Nugget Ave, Lake Isabella, CA 93240 Phone: 760-379-3425 |
Sienna Wellnes Walk-in Clinic Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6425 Lynch Canyon Dr, Lake Isabella, CA 93240 Phone: 760-379-8630 Fax: 760-379-7658 |
Kern Valley Healthcare District Clinic/Center - Rural Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4300 Birch Street, Lake Isabella, CA 93240 Phone: 760-379-1791 Fax: 760-379-1793 |
Mt Mesa Medical Group Internal Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4308 Birch Street, Lake Isabella, CA 93240 Phone: 760-379-2426 Fax: 760-379-2664 |
News Archive
Eiger BioPharmaceuticals, Inc., a biotechnology company developing antiviral therapies, announced today the publication of research from the labs of Stanford scientist and Eiger Founder, Dr. Jeffrey Glenn, M.D., Ph.D. and colleagues entitled, "Identification of a Novel Class of HCV Inhibitors". Published in the January 20th edition of Science and Translational Medicine, the research validates a domain, termed 4BAH2, within the non-structural protein (NS4B) of the HCV genome, as essential for HCV replication and describes the development of a high-throughput screen leading to the identification of small molecule inhibitors of 4BAH2.
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have found in an animal model of acute lung injury a molecular mechanism that allows cells of the immune system to reduce tissue damage from inflammation.
Cancer research leaders from the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research and the University of California, Santa Cruz, in collaboration with Sage Bionetworks and IBM's DREAM, will announce tomorrow the opening of the ICGC-TCGA-DREAM Somatic Mutation Calling Challenge at the Sixth Annual RECOMB/ISCB conference.
Cynical hostility is a potential pathway to cardiovascular disease by preventing a healthy response to stress over time, according to a study led by Baylor University.
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