Riviera Plaza Medical Office Llc Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1702 Ridgewood Ave, Suite I, Holly Hill, FL 32117 Phone: 386-677-5415 Fax: 386-677-1475 |
Nemou Medical Llc Internal Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 231 Riverside Dr Unit 2309, Holly Hill, FL 32117 Phone: 330-774-3371 Fax: 888-959-3690 |
Family Medical Practice Management, Inc. Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 645 Ridgewood Ave, Holly Hill, FL 32117 Phone: 386-258-5476 |
Quick Care Medical Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 645 Ridgewood Ave, Holly Hill, FL 32117 Phone: 386-258-5227 Fax: 386-255-7348 |
Waymaker Np Care Llc Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1700 Ridgewood Ave Ste H, Holly Hill, FL 32117 Phone: 386-882-0063 Fax: 386-281-3370 |
News Archive
When it comes to communicating with each other, some cells may be more "old school" than was previously thought. Certain types of stem cells use microscopic, threadlike nanotubes to communicate with neighboring cells, like a landline phone connection, rather than sending a broadcast signal, researchers at University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center have discovered.
RegeneRx Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. announced today the publication of the first human data from a case study of patients evaluated with its ophthalmic product candidate RGN-259. The data have been published in the May 2010 issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, an American Medical Association peer-reviewed journal.
Mount Sinai Researchers find social isolation during key developmental windows drives long term changes to activity patterns of neurons involved in initiating social approach in an animal model.
The mystery behind a commonly untreatable and undetected heart muscle disease in children is partially revealed for the first time in today's edition of the scientific journal JAMA.
A multi-center team of researchers in the U.S. testing the potential of cell therapy for treating Parkinson's disease (PD) has found that grafting human parthenogenetic stem cell-derived neural stem cells (hpNSCs) into non-human primates modeled with PD promoted behavioral recovery, increased dopamine concentrations in the brain, and induced the expression of beneficial genes and pathways when compared to control animals not transplanted with stem cells.
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