Madeleine Blake Ray, MS/CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 100 Brady Dr, Barboursville, WV 25504 Phone: 304-972-6140 |
Mrs. Allison Brooke Kays, M.S., CF, SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3427 Us Route 60 East, Barboursville, WV 25504 Phone: 304-736-8255 Fax: 304-736-4851 |
Mrs. Melanie Henson Parker Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 28 Colonial Ct, Barboursville, WV 25504 Phone: 251-610-7886 |
Ms. Cassie Lake Stroud, M.A., CCC-S Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3427 Us Route 60 East, Barboursville, WV 25504 Phone: 304-736-8255 Fax: 304-736-4851 |
News Archive
By combining a common organic compound with a rare metal, a team of Brown University chemists has created a new class of molecules that have potentially important applications for the pharmaceutical, chemical and energy industries.
Many expectant parents look forward to routine ultrasounds as their first opportunity to "see" their baby. But the ultrasound can reveal that the fetus has unexpected medical conditions, such as a diagnosis of cleft lip and palate. Despite the emotional distress the diagnosis can bring, it can also offer the opportunity to prepare for the child's future needs. However, a study has found little difference between mothers who were given a prenatal diagnosis of cleft lip and palate and those who discovered the problem at birth.
With the decreasing cost and increasing throughput of sequencing, researchers require a high-performance, cost-effective sample preparation pipeline for targeted sequencing. To enable researchers to more readily match targeted sequencing sample preparation throughput to the ever increasing throughput of next-generation sequencing, Roche NimbleGen announces the imminent launch of a pre-capture multiplex target enrichment protocol.
Cancer scientists led by Dr. John Dick at the Ontario Cancer Institute (OCI) and collaborators at St Jude Children's Research Hospital (Memphis) have found that defective genes and the individual leukemia cells that carry them are organized in a more complex way than previously thought.
Fifteen years ago, a hematologist came to Dianna Milewicz, M.D., Ph.D., with a puzzle: Multiple generations of an East Texas family suffered from a moderately severe bleeding disorder, but it wasn't hemophilia.
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