All Search Results
-
Corporate Office of Research Operations
The Corporate Office of Research Operations (CORO) is responsible for supporting investigators and administrators in research.
-
Corporate Office of Research Operations
The Corporate Office of Research Operations (CORO) is responsible for supporting investigators and administrators in research.
-
Corporate Office of Research Operations
The Corporate Office of Research Operations (CORO) is responsible for supporting investigators and administrators in research.
-
New details released about Orlando Health Lakeland Highlands Hospital
Orlando, FL (October 20, 2022) – When the Orlando Health Lakeland Highlands Hospital opens in 2026, it will open with 302 inpatient beds. That’s more than double the originally announced opening bed count of 136 beds.
-
Pediatric Hepatology Clinic
In conjunction with a pediatric hepatologist, this clinic provides coordination and management of liver disorders.
-
Colonoscopy Information
Colonoscopy is a test that allows your doctor to look directly into the colon (large intestine) with a long flexible tube containing a camera. During the procedure, the doctor may take tiny samples of tissue called biopsies. The biopsies often help your doctor determine the cause of your child's symptoms. Some common reasons why children may need a colonoscopy include: Blood in the bowel movements, diarrhea, abdominal pain, rectal pain, or weight loss.
-
Colonoscopy Information
Colonoscopy is a test that allows your doctor to look directly into the colon (large intestine) with a long flexible tube containing a camera. During the procedure, the doctor may take tiny samples of tissue called biopsies. The biopsies often help your doctor determine the cause of your child's symptoms. Some common reasons why children may need a colonoscopy include: Blood in the bowel movements, diarrhea, abdominal pain, rectal pain, or weight loss.
-
Orlando Health Unveils New Details Of Downtown Mixed-Use Development
Public gets a first look at artist renderings.
-
Study evaluates college football players’ positions for risk of concussions
Orlando, Fla. (September 22, 2022) — A new research study looks inside the brains of college football athletes to measure levels of traumatic brain injury (TBI) biomarkers by player position. This study, conducted in collaboration with researchers at Orlando Health Orlando Regional Medical Center (ORMC) and Penn State University, and published in the Journal of Neurotrauma, sheds light on which positions are at the greatest risk for elevations in brain injury biomarkers. The biomarkers are proteins and other substances released from the brain after it has been damaged.
-
Surveillance or Treatment of Patients w/Germ Cell Tumors
A Phase 3 Study of Active Surveillance for Low Risk and a Randomized Trial of Carboplatin vs. Cisplatin for Standard Risk Pediatric and Adult Patients With Germ Cell Tumors