Jill A. Ridley, NP Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 159 Snowshoe Circle, Breckenridge, CO 80424 Phone: 720-256-8709 Fax: 970-668-0632 |
Mr. Matthew Harmer Cowell, CRNA Registered Nurse Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 662 Shekel Ln, Breckenridge, CO 80424 Phone: 719-290-1186 |
Tanya Alexis Morrison, Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 501 N Park Ave, Breckenridge, CO 80424 Phone: 909-705-2020 |
Lynda Law, Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 71 Illinois Gulch Rd., Unit 18-5, Breckenridge, CO 80424 Phone: 303-619-5237 |
News Archive
Using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), researchers in France were able to detect functional abnormalities in certain regions in the brains of patients diagnosed with fibromyalgia, reinforcing the idea that symptoms of the disorder are related to a dysfunction in those parts of the brain where pain is processed.
For years, obtaining parental consent for clinical research regarding newborn resuscitation in the delivery room has been a challenge. Now, a Saint Louis University pediatric researcher is asking new mothers and pregnant women when doctors should seek parental permission to allow medical research related to delivery room treatments.
The fates of immune cells can be decided at the initial division of a cell. Researchers at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have discovered that the production of daughter cells with different roles in the immune system is driven by the lopsided distribution of the signaling protein c-Myc. Nudging c-Myc in one direction or the other could make vaccines more effective or advance immunotherapies for cancer treatment. The research appears online today in the scientific journal Nature.
A UNICEF training program that provides teenagers in Yemen with information about HIV/AIDS has helped increase awareness about the disease, Nasim ur-Rehman, a UNICEF communication officer, said recently, IRIN/PlusNews reports.
Symptomatic heart failure prior to surgery is routinely acknowledged as a risk factor for adverse outcomes for both cardiac and non-cardiac surgeries. In a new study published in the June Anesthesiology, researchers delve further into the implications of cardiac problems on postoperative outcomes, exploring preoperative diagnosis and impact of asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction in vascular surgery patients.
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