Pamela Simons Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 265 North Van Noy Parkway, Thayne, WY 83127 Phone: 307-883-4116 |
Kristen Amber Walters, SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 487a North Main St, Thayne, WY 83127 Phone: 307-883-8877 Fax: 307-883-8876 |
Mrs. Keira Marie Trauntvein, M.S., CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 487a N Main St, Thayne, WY 83127 Phone: 307-883-8877 Fax: 307-883-8876 |
News Archive
BioWa, Inc. announced today that it has entered into two agreements with GlaxoSmithKline. BioWa and GSK have amended their existing 2007 arrangement in order to provide GSK with extended access to BioWa's POTELLIGENT Technology platform for the research, development and commercialization of their antibody therapeutics with enhanced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. The second license agreement provides GSK with access to BioWa's COMPLEGENT Technology for enhancing the complement-dependent cytotoxicity of select GSK therapeutic antibodies.
Alzheimer's disease is progressive, but slow to develop - or at least to reveal itself. In a new study, published online February 14, 2020 in the journal Biological Psychiatry, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine, with colleagues elsewhere, report that early, subtle differences in cognitive performance, such as fewer words recalled on a memory test, are a sign that harmful proteins are accumulating in the brain, even if levels of those proteins do not yet qualify as dangerous.
Medtronic, Inc. announced today the commercial availability of the Advisa DR MRI™ SureScan™ pacemaker in selected European geographies. The Advisa DR MRI SureScan pacemaker is the company's second-generation pacemaker in a portfolio of devices from Medtronic designed, tested, and approved for use as labeled with MRI machines in selected European geographies.
A study carried out at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine for "The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis" has found that transplanting self-donated Schwann cells (SCs, the principal ensheathing cells of the nervous system) that are elongated so as to bridge scar tissue in the injured spinal cord, aids hind limb functional recovery in rats modeled with spinal cord injury.
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