Mrs. Laura Leigh Boggs Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 280 E Shafer Ave, Dover, OH 44622 Phone: 330-364-7111 |
Lori Denham Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 280 E Shafer Ave, Dover, OH 44622 Phone: 330-364-7111 |
Lacy Iberis Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 325 Betscher Ave, Dover, OH 44622 Phone: 330-364-7114 |
Amy Finnell Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2131 N Wooster Ave, Dover, OH 44622 Phone: 330-364-7121 |
News Archive
When this week's print issue of the journal Science comes out, a collective cheer will go up from New Mexico, Montana and even the Netherlands, thanks to the type of collaborative effort that is more and more the norm in these connected times. Yes, the research was brilliant, and if we're lucky, it will produce innovations in biology, medicine, biotechnology and agriculture. It could save lives, and it happened because this scientist talked with that one, that one knew another one, and brilliant minds overcame geographic distance to advance human understanding.
Mapping the fat distribution of the healthy human brain is a key step in understanding neurological diseases, in general, and the neurodegeneration that accompanies Alzheimer's disease in particular. Antonio Veloso and colleagues, from the University of the Basque Country in Leioa, Spain, find a new technique to reveal the fat distribution of three different areas of the healthy human brain.
The burning of incense might need to come with a health warning. This follows the first study evaluating the health risks associated with its indoor use. The effects of incense and cigarette smoke were also compared, and made for some surprising results. The research was led by Rong Zhou of the South China University of Technology and the China Tobacco Guangdong Industrial Company in China, and is published in Springer's journal Environmental Chemistry Letters.
Using an advanced three-dimensional mapping technique developed by UCLA researchers, the team analyzed magnetic resonance imaging data from 24 patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 25 others with mild Alzheimer's disease.
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