Brookshire Pharmacy #8 Pharmacy Location: 747 Hwy 259 North, Kilgore, Texas 75662 Phone: (903) 984-8639 |
Cvs Pharmacy #06925 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 1000 Stone Rd, Kilgore, Texas 75662 Phone: (903) 984-0646 |
Kilgore Gilmer Eye Care Centers Pa Medicare Supplier Location: 1100 Stone Rd, Kilgore, Texas 75662 Phone: (903) 983-2020 |
Walmart Pharmacy 10-0572 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 1201 Stone St, Kilgore, Texas 75662 Phone: (903) 983-1056 |
Walgreens #11175 Medicare Supplier Location: 701 Us Highway 259 N, Kilgore, Texas 75662 Phone: (903) 983-2892 |
News Archive
To develop improved cancer immunotherapies, it is essential to understand how cancers shut down the natural immune response to foreign antigens. This current study demonstrates how mice lacking the Siah2 gene, fail to develop BRAF-mutation carrying melanoma from the corresponding cells, completely rejecting them. This could help in boosting the anticancer effect of existing specific immune checkpoint inhibitors, such as anti-PD-1 drugs.
According to new Dutch research featured in the September issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, a peptide receptor radiolabeled therapy (PRRT), [177Lu-DOTA0,Tyr3]Octreotate (177Lu-octreotate), is effective not only in decreasing tumor size but also in reducing the severity of side effects that often accompany a cancer diagnosis.
Suicide has been on the increase recently in the United States, currently accounting for almost 40,000 deaths a year. A new study shows that one successful effort to avoid suicide attempts would be to focus on correcting the distorted, catastrophic thoughts about the future that are held by many who try to kill themselves.
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland (D) has filed a brief with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals requesting that his name be removed from a lawsuit defending an Ohio law (HB 126) that would restrict how Danco Laboratories' Mifeprex is used to induce a medical abortion, the AP/Coshocton Tribune reports.
In a study of more than 1.3 million Kaiser Permanente members in Northern California that stretched over 10 years, researchers found that blacks, Latinos and Asians generally had lower risk of coronary heart disease compared to whites.
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