DR. DAVID MAURY TUCKER, M.D.
Psychiatric at Jones Maltsberger Rd, San Antonio, TX

License number
Texas M4608
Category
Psychiatric
Type
Addiction Psychiatry
License number
Texas M4608
Category
Psychiatric
Type
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Address
Address
14743 Jones Maltsberger Rd, San Antonio, TX 78247
Phone
(210) 402-0029
(210) 490-8616 (Fax)
(210) 253-0029

Professional information

David Tucker Photo 1

Database Administrator At The Geneva Foundation

Position:
Database Administrator at The Geneva Foundation
Location:
San Antonio, Texas Area
Industry:
Information Technology and Services
Work:
The Geneva Foundation - San Antonio since Feb 2013 - Database Administrator USAF AFMSA/SG6H Health Informatics Division - San Antonio, Texas Area Feb 2012 - Feb 2013 - Senior Systems Engineer Leaning Forward Technologies - San Antonio, Texas Area Sep 2011 - Feb 2012 - Chief Information Officer Frontline Systems - San Antonio, Texas Area Jan 2002 - Sep 2011 - Chief Information Officer Labat-Anderson Incorporated 2001 - 2002 - Computer Programmer Metrica Inc. 1990 - 1997 - Systems Analyst


David Maury Tucker Photo 2

David Maury Tucker, San Antonio TX

Specialties:
Psychiatry, Addiction Psychiatry, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Child Psychiatry
Work:
Laurel Ridge Treatment Center
17720 Corporate Woods Dr, San Antonio, TX 78259
Education:
Tulane University (1996)


David I Tucker Photo 3

Dr. David I Tucker, Fort Sam Houston TX - DDS (Doctor of Dental Surgery)

Specialties:
Dentistry
Age:
49
Address:
2410 Stanley Rd, Fort Sam Houston 78234
(210) 295-2743 (Phone), (210) 295-2602 (Fax)
Languages:
English


David Tucker Photo 4

Variable Rigidity Impression Tray

US Patent:
2003004, Mar 6, 2003
Filed:
Aug 27, 2002
Appl. No.:
10/228740
Inventors:
Jack Tucker - San Antonio TX, US
David Tucker - San Antonio TX, US
International Classification:
A61C009/00
US Classification:
433/038000, 433/045000
Abstract:
A dental impression tray having varying rigidity. A joint in the tray's posterior is reinforced prior to intraoral placement by a removable wire running through hooks in the tray's rim. Removing the wire after the patient bites imparts flexibility to the joint, and then the tray's frame becomes rigid intraorally when an uncured immobilizing agent previously applied to the joint is cured. The tray's initial rigidity facilitates handling; its subsequent flexibility reduces the frame's plastic memory; and its subsequent rigidity durably locks the tray into a pressure-relieved position.