Dr. Craig M Young MD
Ophthalmologist
24020 132nd Ave SE Kent WA, 98042About
Dr. Craig Young is an ophthalmologist practicing in Kent, WA. Dr. Young specializes in eye and vision care. As an ophthalmologist, Dr. Young can practice medicine as well as surgery. Opthalmologists can perform surgeries because they have their medical degrees along with at least eight years of additional training. Dr. Young can diagnose and treat diseases, perform eye operations and prescribe eye glasses and contacts. Ophthalmologists can also specialize even further in a specific area of eye care.
Education and Training
Or Hlth Sci Univ Sch of Med, Portland Or 1978
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine 1978
Board Certification
OphthalmologyAmerican Board of OphthalmologyABO
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Spermiogenesis and modified sperm morphology in the "seepworm" Methanoaricia dendrobranchiata (Polychaeta: Orbiniidae) from a methane seep environment in the Gulf of Mexico: implications for fertilization biology.
- Sperm storage, internal fertilization, and embryonic dispersal in vent and seep tubeworms (Polychaeta: Siboglinidae: Vestimentifera).
- Influence of environmental conditions on early development of the hydrothermal vent polychaete Alvinella pompejana.
- Egg predation fuels unique species association at deep-sea hydrocarbon seeps.
- Vailulu'u Seamount, Samoa: Life and death on an active submarine volcano.
- Spawning, development, and the duration of larval life in a deep-sea cold-seep mussel.
- Biological bulletin virtual symposium: biology of marine invertebrate larvae.
- New molluscan larval form: brooding and development in a hydrothermal vent gastropod, Ifremeria nautilei (Provannidae).
- Larval development and metamorphosis of the deep-sea cidaroid urchin Cidaris blakei.
- Complete development of the northeast Pacific arminacean nudibranch Janolus fuscus.
- Dispersal of deep-sea larvae from the intra-American seas: simulations of trajectories using ocean models.
- Deep sequencing of Myxilla (Ectyomyxilla) methanophila, an epibiotic sponge on cold-seep tubeworms, reveals methylotrophic, thiotrophic, and putative hydrocarbon-degrading microbial associations.
- Fixed, free, and fixed: the fickle phylogeny of extant Crinoidea (Echinodermata) and their Permian-Triassic origin.
- Impacts of an endoparasitic copepod, Ismaila belciki, on the reproduction, growth and survivorship of its nudibranch host, Janolus fuscus.
- Larvae from deep-sea methane seeps disperse in surface waters.
Treatments
- Cataracts
- Diabetes
- Macular Degeneration
- Glaucoma
- Diabetic Retinopathy
- Type 2 Diabetes
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