Healthcare Equipment & Supply Co Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 628 Old Saint Marys Rd, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 547-4526 |
American Homepatient Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 713 North Kingshighway, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 547-2684 |
Wal Mart Pharmacy 10-0082 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 1750 S Perryville Blvd, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 547-2571 |
Prescriptions Plus Pharmacy Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 212 Hospital Ln, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 547-4960 |
Walgreens #10908 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 6 S Perryville Blvd, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 517-0029 |
Equipment Plus Home Services Medicare Supplier Location: 434 N West St, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 768-3347 |
Clarkson Optometry Inc Medicare Supplier Location: 100 S Jackson St, Perryville, Missouri 63775 Phone: (573) 547-6233 |
News Archive
MedivirAB is an emerging researchbased specialty pharmaceutical company focused on infectious diseases. Medivir today announced that its investigational protease inhibitor TMC435, developed by Tibotec Pharmaceuticals, has successfully completed enrollment of three ongoing global phase 3 trials and further reports that all patients are now on TMC435 or active control treatment.
A group of physiologists led by University of Kentucky's Tim McClintock have identified the receptors activated by two odors using a new method that tracks responses to smells in live mice.
By using induced pluripotent stem cells to create endothelial cells that line blood vessels in the brain for the first time for a neurodegenerative disease, University of California, Irvine neurobiologists and colleagues have learned why Huntington's disease patients have defects in the blood-brain barrier that contribute to the symptoms of this fatal disorder.
Results of a new study suggest that over the past decade (2005-2017), the prevalence of cannabis use in the United States has increased among persons with and without depression, though the increase is significantly more rapid among those with depression.
Neurologists have long debated how to help prevent certain stroke patients from suffering a second stroke. Now research from UNC School of Medicine provides the first evidence for which course of treatment is truly best for patients with poor collateral blood vessel formation near the site of stroke: they should have their blood pressure lowered to normal levels.
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