«Doctors in some remote areas don't have access to the high - powered microscopes we use to
evaluate skin samples,» said Richard Jahan - Tigh, M.D., assistant professor of dermatology at John P. and Kathrine G. McGovern Medical School at UTHealth.
Not exact matches
Our highly trained technicians
evaluate urine,
skin scrapings, ear swabs and fecal
samples using a variety of equipment like the microscope, refractometer and centrifuge.
This eases the friction between the blade and
skin during the
sampling process and promotes collecting and trapping the material to be
evaluated.
Duties include
evaluating the health of our resident dogs and cats and prescribing appropriate medication and treatment plans, approving animals for adoption, administering medications (oral, topical, SQ, IM, IV, etc.) and vaccinations, obtaining
samples and running diagnostic tests (bloodwork, urinalysis, fecal floats,
skin cytology, etc.) and responding to medical emergencies.
By contrast, a second study provides each subject with a wide range of facial images designed specifically to
evaluate different dimensions of facial recognition (
skin colour, hair colour, ethnicity, facial shape, etc.), each subject is tested over the full range of recall time periods, and a blood
sample is taken from which serum concentrations of several well - described stress hormones are measured.