CLOs on the Move

Ionwerks

www.ionwerks.com

 
Ionwerks is a Houston, TX-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech sector.
  • Number of Employees: 100-250
  • Annual Revenue: $10-50 Million

Executives

Name Title Contact Details

Similar Companies

D. Anderson and Company

D. Anderson and Company is a Dallas, TX-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech sector.

Ancillare

Ancillary Supply Chain, Simplified Ancillare is the leader in end-to-end global clinical trial ancillary supply chain management needs of large- and middle-market pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and medical device companies, as well as contract and medical research organizations. Ancillare is the first organization of its kind with an exclusive focus on the global clinical trial ancillary supply chain. Ancillare arms sponsors of global clinical trials with a customized, end-to-end Ancillare Supply Plan, enabling developers of new therapies to optimize their clinical study supply chains using streamlined processes, extensive global buying power, a vast depot network and proven teams of clinical, procurement, operations, logistics, and regulatory experts. Ancillare`s Turn-Key Operations (A-TKO™) model embraces the complexities and globalization of the clinical and ancillary supply chain by reducing both the overall cost and cycle time of clinical trials, and greatly improving operational efficiency across all levels of the value chain. Ancillare has supported more than 1,500 clinical trials across 80,000 clinical sites over 100 countries with master depots in United States, United Kingdom, and Singapore, and strategic depots in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, India, Israel, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Russia, South Africa, Taiwan, and Ukraine.

Makro Scientific

Makro Scientific is a Newark, NJ-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, & Biotech sector.

Diffusion Pharmaceuticals

Neuralink is a team of exceptionally talented people. We are creating the future of brain-machine interfaces: building devices now that will help people with paralysis and inventing new technologies that will expand our abilities, our community, and our world. Our goal is to build a system with at least two orders of magnitude more communication channels (electrodes) than current clinically-approved devices. This system needs to be safe, it must have fully wireless communication through the skin, and it has to be ready for patients to take home and use on their own. Our device, called the Link, will be able to record from 1024 electrodes and is designed to meet these criteria.