Page 405«..1020..404405406407..410420..»

Filling A Gap In Special-Needs Dental Care – Texas A&M Today – Texas A&M University Today

Posted: Published on January 27th, 2021

Dan Burch, clinical assistant professor in the Texas A&M College of Dentistry. Texas A&M College of Dentistry With a special-needs daughter who had slipped into a dental desert, a frustrated mom pleaded withDan Burch, clinical assistant professor in pediatric dentistryat theTexas A&M University College of Dentistry, for help. Continue reading

Posted in Cerebral Palsy Treatment | Comments Off on Filling A Gap In Special-Needs Dental Care – Texas A&M Today – Texas A&M University Today

Texas A&M: The Texas A&M College of Dentistry is starting a special-needs dentistry program and plans to open a specialty clinic for teens and adults….

Posted: Published on January 27th, 2021

With a special-needs daughter who had slipped into a dental desert, a frustrated mom pleaded with Dan Burch, clinical assistant professor in pediatric dentistry at the Texas A&M University College of Dentistry, for help. Burch has an affinity for special-needs patients going back to his residency at Howard University Hospital in Washington, D.C. Thinking back to the day he walked into an east Fort Worth office to the crying mother, he recalls that she told him he was the only in-network doctor she could find Continue reading

Posted in Cerebral Palsy Treatment | Comments Off on Texas A&M: The Texas A&M College of Dentistry is starting a special-needs dentistry program and plans to open a specialty clinic for teens and adults….

Keeping Her Heart in the Game | Health News – Central Florida Health News

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

by PAUL CATALA When Chands Leath was a young girl, she led an active life playing Little League softball and playing around her neighborhood in Lake Wales. But as Leath got older, she began to gain weight, developed asthma and as a teenager was diagnosed with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, a hormonal disorder that causes enlarged ovaries with cysts on them. Continue reading

Posted in Heart Diseases | Comments Off on Keeping Her Heart in the Game | Health News – Central Florida Health News

Vet Speak: Cats are very good at hiding the signs of heart disease – RossShire Journal

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

Alison Laurie-Chalmers. Continue reading

Posted in Cardiomyopathies | Comments Off on Vet Speak: Cats are very good at hiding the signs of heart disease – RossShire Journal

Counties combine push for more vaccines – The Record Newspapers – TheRecordLive.com

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

Orange County has joined a five-county Southeast Texas group in an effort to get more COVID-19 vaccines into the arms of its citizens. John Gothia, Orange County judge, said the goal is to establish one or more permanent vaccination hub sites and possibly a mobile vaccine unit for use in Orange, Hardin, Jasper, Newton, and Jefferson Counties. By combining their public health resources and populations, the resulting "consortium" covering a population of nearly a half-million residents would be able to guarantee the state that it has the ability to give out 22,000 vaccinations per week, which Gothia explained is a requirement to be considered a permanent hub Continue reading

Posted in Cardiomyopathies | Comments Off on Counties combine push for more vaccines – The Record Newspapers – TheRecordLive.com

Neuroscientists Find Thin Line Between Love and Hate in the Mouse Brain – SciTechDaily

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

Mounting behavior, that awkward thrusting motion dogs sometimes do against your leg, is usually associated with sexual arousal in animals, but this is not always the case. New research by Caltech neuroscientists that explores the motivations behind mounting behavior in mice finds that sometimes there is a thin line between love and hate (or anger) in the mouse brain. Continue reading

Posted in Hypothalamus | Comments Off on Neuroscientists Find Thin Line Between Love and Hate in the Mouse Brain – SciTechDaily

PGIMER conducts nasal endoscopic surgery on youngest-ever patient – The Hindu

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

The Chandigarh-based premier tertiary care hospital, the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), has said that its team of endoscopic skull-base surgeons have successfully removed a large brain tumour (craniopharyngioma) through the nose on the youngest-ever patient for such a surgery in the world. An official statement from PGIMER said the operation was conducted by team of surgeons, including Dr. Continue reading

Posted in Hypothalamus | Comments Off on PGIMER conducts nasal endoscopic surgery on youngest-ever patient – The Hindu

PGIMER Chandigarh Doctors Successfully Remove Brain Tumour from Youngest Patient | The Weather Channel – Articles from The Weather Channel |…

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

Representative Image Doctors at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) here have created history by operating on the world's youngest large brain tumour patient that was removed through the nose, it was announced on Thursday. The youngest child reported till date to have undergone endoscopic surgery through the nose for removal of such a tumour was two years old, operated on in 2019 in Stanford in the US, said a hospital press release. Continue reading

Posted in Hypothalamus | Comments Off on PGIMER Chandigarh Doctors Successfully Remove Brain Tumour from Youngest Patient | The Weather Channel – Articles from The Weather Channel |…

Garth Rattray | Non-contact infrared thermometers are safe – Jamaica Gleaner

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

Far too many people willingly accept whatever drivel is meted out to them as irrefutable facts. Sadly, its now become fairly common for charlatans, demented, misguided, or attention-seeking nuts to don farcical faades virtually and splash rubbish all across the Internet. Continue reading

Posted in Hypothalamus | Comments Off on Garth Rattray | Non-contact infrared thermometers are safe – Jamaica Gleaner

PGI adds another feather to its cap – The Tribune India

Posted: Published on January 26th, 2021

Tribune News Service Chandigarh, January 21 The PGI today successfully removed a large brain tumour through the nose of a one year and four months old girl child, who is said to be the youngest patient in the world to have such an endoscopic surgery. According to a press release, the girl from Uttarakhand was referred to the premier institute with complaints of loss of vision. Continue reading

Posted in Hypothalamus | Comments Off on PGI adds another feather to its cap – The Tribune India

Page 405«..1020..404405406407..410420..»