Health | Science | Technology | Space | Sports | Entertainment | Mobile | Games | Economy | Politics | Movies | Music | [Top News]

HTDS Collagenna Skin Care Products enters into exclusive distribution agreement with Medimec

May 21, 2010
Hard to Treat Diseases Collagenna Skin care Products has entered into an exclusive distribution agreement with the Malaysian company Medimec www.medimec.com.my

5 Responses to “HTDS Collagenna Skin Care Products enters into exclusive distribution agreement with Medimec”

  1. Kami Held says:

    Reading this was such a great help. Anti aging skin products is such a complicated thing and this article explained it well. Thank you very much for the new infos and advices.

  2. Jesse Rudnick says:

    This article helped me a lot. It tells all the things that you need to know and what you need to do. Thanks a lot for sharing your knowledge to us.

  3. Jack Gackle says:

    I am one of those who want to eliminate the signs of aging. This articles is just exactly what i needed. Now i know what to do, thanks very much.

  4. Jospeh Pescatore says:

    Having to read articles like this is wonderful. Thank you very much. This post had many importance to me.

  5. Are You Using the Best Acne Skin Care For Skin Cleansing? | Save Your Skin! says:

    [...] HTDS Collagenna Skin Care Products enters into exclusive … [...]

Leave a Reply


High-throughput sequencing can detect early signs of leukemia relapse

A study led by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has found that a next-generation, high-speed DNA-decoding technology called high-throughput sequencing can detect the earliest signs of potential relapse in nearly twice the number of leukemia patients as compared to flow cytometry, the current gold standard for detecting minimal ...

U.S. support for Global Fund may be ‘America’s greatest global health legacy’

"This year marks the 10th anniversary of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the world's most powerful tool in the fight against the three pandemics," Jonathan Klein, co-founder and CEO of Getty Images, Inc., writes in this post in the Huffington Post Blog.

Smartphones can improve QOL for people with poor vision

iPhones and other smartphones can be a huge help to the visually impaired, but few vision doctors are recommending them to patients, according to a study co-authored by a Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine ophthalmologist.

Treating prenatal maternal infections could improve birth outcomes, study suggests

Clinical trials are underway to test an azithromycin-based combination treatment for pregnant women, "which could tackle some of the leading preventable causes of death for babies in sub-Saharan Africa," according to researchers from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), who published a report on Wednesday in the ...

Head impacts may worsen contact sport athletes’ ability to acquire new information

A new study suggests that head impacts experienced during contact sports such as football and hockey may worsen some college athletes' ability to acquire new information. The research is published in the May 16, 2012, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Immediate response required to curb spread of artemisinin-resistant malaria in Burma

In this Wall Street Journal opinion piece, Jay Winsten, associate dean at the Harvard School of Public Health, and Trish Stroman, a principal at the Boston Consulting Group, examine "the emergence in Southeast Asia of malarial parasites resistant to artemisinin -- the current gold-standard drug for treating the disease," writing ...

DSM needs radical change from its current ‘field guide’ form

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), long the master reference work in psychiatry, is seriously flawed and needs radical change from its current "field guide" form, according to an essay by two Johns Hopkins psychiatrists published in the May 17 issue of the New England Journal of ...