LOS ANGELES, CA, March 19, 2012 (Press-News.org) There are quite a few things around the house that many take for granted, no matter how often they are used. Individuals will find themselves enjoying the features and utility of high end appliances to cook their food, clean dishes, and help to wash clothes. When these appliances begin to break down, it is going to put an immediate halt to almost everything in the household. For locals that are going to need these devices back up in working condition as quickly and affordably as possible, the leading Los Angeles appliance repair company, AM PM, is now offering specialty services for all high end appliances.
High end appliances are those that take something as simple as cooking food, and completely remove the guesswork from it. They come with advanced options that many owners will not think twice about until they are no longer working. When it comes to appliance service calls for GE, LG, Kenmore Elite and Subzero appliance repair, owners are going to want a company that specializes in appliance repair in Los Angeles for quick and affordable fixes.
AM PM Appliance Repair has been operating throughout Southern California for over 15 years. Their fleet of service vans can carry out almost all Whirlpool, Sharp, Hair, and Thermador appliance repair and maintenance onsite. Their initial service calls begin at just $45, a cost that is completely removed for customers that opt to go with AM PM for their services, repairs, and maintenance.
When appliances begin to breakdown, owners do not need to let their homes fall into disarray. More customers than ever are making the call to AM PM to get their high end appliances back in working condition.
AM PM set out in 1994 with the goal of providing affordable services to all locals. They offer a 5 year warranty on labor and work with all major appliances and brands. Their specialists can also carry out all Admiral, Panasonic, Miele, and Viking appliance repair for customers in the greater Los Angeles area. They offer service calls starting at just $45, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Visit http://www.ampmappliancerepair.com or call (800) 343-6011 to learn more about the services provided by AM PM.
PR by http://www.seocompanyca.com
Top Los Angeles Appliance Repair Company, AM PM Appliance Repair, is now Offering Specialty Services for High End Appliances
Owners of high end appliances are now being offered specialty repair services by AM PM Appliance Repair.
2012-03-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Closing hole in the heart no better than drugs in preventing strokes
2012-03-19
MAYWOOD, Il. -- Loyola University Medical Center is one of the major enrollers in a landmark clinical trial that found that plugging a hole in the heart works no better than drugs in preventing strokes.
The study is published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Loyola enrolled 24 patients, one of the highest patient enrolments in the multicenter trial, and more than any other Chicago-area hospital. Principal investigators at the Loyola site are stroke specialist Dr. Michael Schneck and interventional cardiologist Dr. Fred Leya.
About 1 in 4 adults has a small hole ...
2012 Internal Medicine Residency match virtually unchanged from 2011
2012-03-19
PHILADELPHIA -- The number of U.S. medical student seniors at medical schools choosing internal medicine residencies leveled in 2012 after two years of significant increases. According to the 2012 National Resident Matching Program, 2,941 U.S. medical school seniors matched internal medicine, nearly unchanged from 2011 when 2,940 matched internal medicine.
"After seeing increases in 2010 and 2011 for the internal medicine residency match for U.S. medical students, we are disappointed that there was not a bigger increase this year," said Virginia L. Hood, MBBS, MPH, FACP, ...
Mesquite trees displacing Southwestern grasslands
2012-03-19
As the desert Southwest becomes hotter and drier, semi-arid grasslands are slowly being replaced by a landscape dominated by mesquite trees, such as Prosopis velutina, and other woody shrubs, a team of University of Arizona researchers has found.
In a "leaf-to-landscape" approach, the team combined physiological experiments on individual plants and measurements across entire ecosystems to quantify how well grasslands, compared to mesquite trees and woody shrubs, cope with heat and water stress across seasonal precipitation periods.
"Our results show that even the smallest ...
Researchers reveal how a single gene mutation leads to uncontrolled obesity
2012-03-19
Washington, D.C. -- Researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center have revealed how a mutation in a single gene is responsible for the inability of neurons to effectively pass along appetite suppressing signals from the body to the right place in the brain. What results is obesity caused by a voracious appetite.
Their study, published March 18th on Nature Medicine's website, suggests there might be a way to stimulate expression of that gene to treat obesity caused by uncontrolled eating.
The research team specifically found that a mutation in the brain-derived ...
Need for speed
2012-03-19
Like any law-abiding train passenger, a molecule called oskar RNA carries a stamped ticket detailing its destination and form of transport, scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, have found. They show that for this molecule, moving in the right direction isn't enough: speed is of the essence. Their study, published online today in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, also provides clues as to how a single molecule could receive tickets for different destinations, depending on what type of cell it is in.
For a fruit fly ...
Miami Defense Attorney Diana Gonzalez Runs for Judge
2012-03-19
Ferrer Shane, PL is proud to announce that one of its attorneys, Diana E. Gonzalez, is running for Miami-Dade County Court Judge.
Starting her career in 2004, Diana Gonzalez was rapidly promoted up the ranks in the Public Defender's Office, first handling misdemeanor charges, then defending young people in the juvenile division, to ultimately defending clients charged with the most serious felonies - all in the span of just five years, trying everything from a traffic ticket to a murder case.
Having traveled abroad with the U.S. Department of Defense and with USAID ...
New insight into mechanisms behind autoimmune diseases suggests a potential therapy
2012-03-19
LA JOLLA, Calif., March 18, 2012 – Autoimmune diseases, such as Type I diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis, are caused by an immune system gone haywire, where the body's defense system assaults and destroys healthy tissues. A mutant form of a protein called LYP has been implicated in multiple autoimmune diseases, but the precise molecular pathway involved has been unknown. Now, in a paper published March 18 in Nature Chemical Biology, researchers at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute (Sanford-Burnham) show how the errant form of LYP can disrupt the immune system. ...
UMass Amherst theoretical physicists find a way to simulate strongly correlated fermions
2012-03-19
AMHERST, Mass. – Combining known factors in a new way, theoretical physicists Boris Svistunov and Nikolai Prokof'ev at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, with three alumni of their group, have solved an intractable 50-year-old problem: How to simulate strongly interacting quantum systems to allow accurate predictions of their properties.
It could open the door to practical superconductor applications, as well as to solving difficult "many-body" problems in high-energy physics, condensed matter and ultra-cold atoms.
The theoretical breakthrough by Prokof'ev and ...
Improving Your Doctor's Hygiene
2012-03-19
When people don't feel well, they see a doctor. They probably assume that the doctor will not spread anything to them to make them sicker. Ohio residents may be disturbed to find out that hygiene in hospitals is not as high of a priority as one would expect.
Hospital-acquired infections are the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. A 2004 study done by the American College of Physicians found that only 57 percent of doctors washed their hands when they were supposed to. The study also showed that the busier the doctor was and the more patients needing ...
Columbia Engineering and Penn researchers increase speed of single-molecule measurements
2012-03-19
New York, NY—March 18, 2012—As nanotechnology becomes ever more ubiquitous, researchers are using it to make medical diagnostics smaller, faster, and cheaper, in order to better diagnose diseases, learn more about inherited traits, and more. But as sensors get smaller, measuring them becomes more difficult—there is always a tradeoff between how long any measurement takes to make and how precise it is. And when a signal is very weak, the tradeoff is especially big.
A team of researchers at Columbia Engineering, led by Electrical Engineering Professor Ken Shepard, together ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New method could reveal hidden supermassive black hole binaries
Novel AI model accurately detects placenta accreta in pregnancy before delivery, new research shows
Global Physics Photowalk winners announced
Exercise trains a mouse's brain to build endurance
New-onset nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy and initiators of semaglutide in US veterans with type 2 diabetes
Availability of higher-level neonatal care in rural and urban US hospitals
Researchers identify brain circuit and cells that link prior experiences to appetite
Frog love songs and the sounds of climate change
Hunter-gatherers northwestern Europe adopted farming from migrant women, study reveals
Light-based sensor detects early molecular signs of cancer in the blood
3D MIR technique guides precision treatment of kids’ heart conditions
Which childhood abuse survivors are at elevated risk of depression? New study provides important clues
Plants retain a ‘genetic memory’ of past population crashes, study shows
CPR skills prepare communities to save lives when seconds matter
FAU study finds teen ‘sexting’ surge, warns of sextortion and privacy risks
Chinese Guidelines for Clinical Diagnosis, Treatment, and Management of Cirrhosis (2025)
Insilico Medicine featured in Harvard Business School case on Rentosertib
Towards unlocking the full potential of sodium- and potassium-ion batteries
UC Irvine-led team creates first cell type-specific gene regulatory maps for Alzheimer’s disease
Unraveling the mystery of why some cancer treatments stop working
From polls to public policy: how artificial intelligence is distorting online research
Climate policy must consider cross-border pollution “exchanges” to address inequality and achieve health benefits, research finds
What drives a mysterious sodium pump?
Study reveals new cellular mechanisms that allow the most common chronic cardiac arrhythmia to persist in the heart
Scientists discover new gatekeeper cell in the brain
High blood pressure: trained laypeople improve healthcare in rural Africa
Pitt research reveals protective key that may curb insulin-resistance and prevent diabetes
Queen Mary research results in changes to NHS guidelines
Sleep‑aligned fasting improves key heart and blood‑sugar markers
Releasing pollack at depth could benefit their long-term survival, study suggests
[Press-News.org] Top Los Angeles Appliance Repair Company, AM PM Appliance Repair, is now Offering Specialty Services for High End AppliancesOwners of high end appliances are now being offered specialty repair services by AM PM Appliance Repair.






