Walgreen #19614 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 2300 Grand Central Ave, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 295-4573 |
Sam's Club Pharmacy Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 1100 Grand Central Ave, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 295-5675 |
Wal Mart Pharmacy 10-1782 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 701 Grand Central Ave, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 422-3526 |
Dutton Pharmacy Pharmacy Location: 3201 Grand Central Ave, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 295-9594 |
Bond's Drug Community/Retail Pharmacy Location: 800 Grand Central Mall, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 295-7356 |
Eyedoctors Medicare Supplier Location: 1500 Grand Central Ave, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 295-5025 |
Vienna Eye Clinic Medicare Supplier Location: 1600 Grand Central Ave, Vienna, West Virginia 26105 Phone: (304) 295-8561 |
News Archive
Glioblastoma multiforme is the most common form of brain cancer and patients with this diagnosis have a life expectancy of less than two years. In spite of the fact that its diagnosis is very good, an appropriate treatment remains elusive.
A gene that helps the body convert that big plate of holiday cookies you just polished off into fat could provide a new target for potential treatments for fatty liver disease, diabetes and obesity.
Intact hearing is a prerequisite for learning to speak. This is why children who are born deaf are fitted with so-called cochlear implants as early as possible. Cochlear implants consist of a speech processor and a transmitter coil worn behind the ear, together with the actual implant, an encapsulated microprocessor placed under the skin to directly stimulate the auditory nerve via an electrode with up to 22 contacts.
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's secretary of state and number two official, "called Friday on the international community to provide 'free and efficient treatment' for AIDS in Africa, starting with pregnant women, mothers and their babies," Agence France-Presse reports.
A research consortium headed by Professor Hossam Haick of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology is developing a product that, when coupled with a smartphone, will be able to screen the user's breath for early detection of life-threatening diseases.
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