Carmeline F Gross Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 12 Winthrop Ln, Flagler Beach, FL 32136 Phone: 386-569-3998 Fax: 386-693-3214 |
Ms. Elizabeth A Stevens, MACCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 712 N Central Ave, Flagler Beach, FL 32136 Phone: 386-439-4324 |
Taylor Jean Eget, M.ED. Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1514 N Daytona Ave, Flagler Beach, FL 32136 Phone: 770-712-8414 |
News Archive
Survivors of sepsis-a life-threatening response to an infection-have expressed a need for advocacy and follow-up support, according to a study authored by professors at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, and published in Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing.
When signals between the brain and one eye go awry, input from the other eye can become predominant, a condition called amblyopia or "lazy eye."
Of the more than 23,000 genes in the human genome, only a handful assume a very central role in signal transduction and growth regulation. Of these, the three genes encoding RAS proteins are particularly important, as they are found mutated in over 25% of human cancers.
In new research appearing in this month's issue of the journal Nature Immunology, Roy Curtiss, director of the Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology at the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University, along with international collaborators, investigates the coordination of a particular type of immune response, involving the release of of IFN-λ- a cell-signaling protein molecule known as a cytokine.
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