At a Glance

Why Get Tested?

To distinguish between skeletal muscle and heart muscle damage; sometimes to determine if you have had a heart attack (if the troponin test is not available); sometimes to detect a second or subsequent heart attack or to monitor for additional heart damage

When To Get Tested?

When you have an increased creatine kinase (CK) level and the health care practitioner wants to determine whether it is due to skeletal or heart muscle damage; when it is suspected that you have had a second heart attack or have ongoing heart damage

Sample Required?

A blood sample drawn from a vein in your arm

Test Preparation Needed?

None

Millstone Nj Garbage Collection Services [repack] -

Before you move to Millstone, ask the previous owner who they used for trash. And bookmark the township’s “Public Works” page—because in Millstone, garbage freedom comes with personal responsibility.

A week later, Tom’s bins were empty by 8 a.m. on pickup day. He even started using the township’s free recycling depot for extra cardboard from online deliveries. Mrs. Cavanaugh gave him a thumbs-up. millstone nj garbage collection services

Tom froze. “Wait… then where does the garbage go?” Before you move to Millstone, ask the previous

| Service | Who Provides? | Cost | Notes | |--------|--------------|------|-------| | Weekly trash pickup | Private hauler only | ~$35–50/month | No municipal option | | Recycling pickup | Private hauler (or self-haul to depot) | Varies | Depot at 125 Millstone Rd is free | | Yard waste | Millstone DPW | Free (seasonal) | Check town website for dates | | Bulk items | Private hauler (fee) or county facility | Varies | County facility charges by weight | | Hazardous waste | Monmouth County | Free (scheduled events) | Paint, batteries, chemicals | on pickup day

The Millstone Mystery: How One Family Solved the Garbage Puzzle

When the Marino family moved from bustling Jersey City to a quiet, wooded home in Millstone Township, they thought they had traded honking horns for chirping crickets. But on their first Tuesday morning in town, Tom Marino wheeled two heavy bins to the curb—one for trash, one for recycling—only to watch his neighbor, Mrs. Cavanaugh, shake her head from her driveway.