Mrs. Stacie L Pardue MA
Speech-Language Pathologist
4440B 26TH ST W BRADENTON FL, 34207About
Dr. Stacie Pardue is a speech language pathologist practicing in BRADENTON, FL. Dr. Pardue specializes in speech, language and swallowing disorders in patients. As a speech language pathologist, Dr. Pardue evaluates, diagnoses and treats patients with communication and swallowing troubles. These conditions may be due to developmental delay, brain injury, hearing loss, autism, stroke or other diseases and injuries. Dr. Pardue helps patients make sounds and improve their voices through various methods. Speech language pathologists also work with patients to strengthen muscles used to speak and swallow, and work with individuals and families to help cope with their conditions.
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Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- The virtual revolution: implications for academe.
- Isolation of chicken primordial germ cells using fluorescence-activated cell sorting.
- Production of chick germline chimeras from fluorescence-activated cell-sorted gonocytes.
- In ovo administration of boron alters bone mineralization of the chicken embryo.
- Food, energy, and the environment.
- In ovo growth hormone alters growth and adipose tissue development of chickens.
- Role of ascorbic acid in chicks exposed to high environmental temperature.
- Influence of supplemental ascorbic acid on broiler performance following exposure to high environmental temperature.
- Evidence for amelioration of steroid-mediated immunosuppression by ascorbic acid.
- Plasma ascorbic acid concentration following ascorbic acid loading in chicks.
- The excretory system of young chickens experiencing mercury toxicity--effects on
- Humoral immunity in Japanese quail following surgical bursectomy at various ages.
- A harness and computer system to facilitate automated body temperature data collection in heat-stressed broilers.
- Effect of ascorbate on luteinizing hormone stimulated progesterone biosynthesis in chicken granulosa cells in vitro.
- Relative bioavailability of L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate in broiler chickens.
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