/PRNewswire/ Evon Medics, LLC today announced that its Co-Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Dr. Evaristus Nwulia has been appointed as the Outreach.
/PRNewswire/ Small business, Evon Medics, LLC today announced that it has been awarded a non-dilutive grant of $2.8 million for its SBIR (Small Business.
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ELKRIDGE, Md., June 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Small business, Evon Medics, LLC today announced that community engagement and social work consultant, Mr. George C. McFarland has joined the advisory board of the company in a formal advisory role. Mr. McFarland is currently the President and CEO of McFarland & Associates, Inc. a management consulting firm established in Montgomery County, Maryland in 1989. Mr. McFarland s network and experience working with numerous federal, state, and community organizations throughout the United States to improve the quality of life in communities affected by health and social determined risks would be valuable to Evon Medics as we continue to engage these underserved populations in our clinical trials, said Charles Nwaokobia, Chief Operating Officer, Evon Medics, LLC. We are also excited about the opportunity to leverage his wealth of experience managing over $100 million in grants and contracts to promote he
Odor Identification Compared to Odor Memory Significantly Activates Olfactory Brain Regions Relevant to Alzheimer s Disease
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ELKRIDGE, Md., May 6, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Small business, Evon Medics, LLC today announced that its study titled Comparative Effects of Repetitive Odor Identification and Odor Memory Tasks on Olfactory Engagement in Older Populations – A Pilot fMRI Study has been published in the Dove Medical Press Journal of Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatments.
The study results from a predominantly African American sample suggest that odor identification tasks may be more potent than memory tasks in targeted olfactory engagement in older populations. An interesting finding from the study was that repetitive odor identification significantly engaged the hippocampus – a region relevant to Alzheimer s Disease – more significantly than did odor memory tasks.