9 results on '"Sood, Naresh K."'
Search Results
2. Large‐scale mortality in cultured tilapia Oreochromis niloticus due to infection with Shewanella putrefaciens in India.
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Sood, Neeraj, Pradhan, Pravata K., Ravindra, Verma, Dev K., Yadav, Manoj K., Mishra, Rupesh K., Kumar, Uday, Swaminathan, Thanga R., and Sood, Naresh K.
- Subjects
NILE tilapia ,SHEWANELLA putrefaciens ,BETA lactam antibiotics ,GLYCOPEPTIDE antibiotics ,MICROBIAL sensitivity tests ,MACROLIDE antibiotics - Abstract
In recent years, infection with Shewanella putrefaciens has emerged as a serious problem in freshwater aquaculture. In the present study, we report large‐scale mortality in farmed tilapia Oreochromis niloticus from Hisar, North India. The diseased tilapia exhibited lethargy, swimming near the water surface, fin rot, hemorrhages on the operculum, and approximately 40% mortality. Gram‐negative, motile, catalase, and oxidase‐positive bacilli were isolated from the kidney of affected tilapia and confirmed as S. putrefaciens on the basis of biochemical tests and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The antimicrobial sensitivity test revealed that S. putrefaciens strains were sensitive to quinolone, nitrofuran, tetracycline, aminoglycoside, cephalosporin, aminocyclitol, sulphonamide, and macrolide antibiotics, but resistant to beta‐lactam and glycopeptide antibiotics. The histopathological examination revealed degenerative changes in the kidney, liver, spleen, and intestine suggesting systemic infection. In experimental infection studies, the disease was reproduced in naive tilapia, and the clinical signs resembled those observed in natural cases. Further more, S. putrefaciens was re‐isolated from the kidney of challenged tilapia, fulfilling Koch's postulates. Therefore, the mortality in tilapia was attributed to S. putrefaciens infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. Effectiveness of Ventricular Intrinsic Preference (VIP™) and Ventricular AutoCapture (VAC) algorithms in pacemaker patients: Results of the validate study.
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Yadav, Rakesh, Jaswal, Aparna, Chennapragada, Sridevi, Kamath, Prakash, Hiremath, Shirish M.S., Kahali, Dhiman, Anand, Sumit, Sood, Naresh K., Mishra, Anil, Makkar, Jitendra S., and Kaul, Upendra
- Abstract
Background Several past clinical studies have demonstrated that frequent and unnecessary right ventricular pacing in patients with sick sinus syndrome and compromised atrio-ventricular conduction (AVC) produces long-term adverse effects. The safety and efficacy of two pacemaker algorithms, Ventricular Intrinsic Preference™ (VIP) and Ventricular AutoCapture (VAC), were evaluated in a multi-center study in pacemaker patients. Methods We evaluated 80 patients across 10 centers in India. Patients were enrolled within 15 days of dual chamber pacemaker (DDDR) implantation, and within 45 days thereafter were classified to either a compromised AVC (cAVC) arm or an intact AVC (iAVC) arm based on intrinsic paced/sensed (AV/PV) delays. In each arm, patients were then randomized (1:1) into the following groups: VIP OFF and VAC OFF (Control group; CG), or VIP ON and VAC ON (Treatment Group; TG). Subsequently, the AV/PV delays in the CG groups were mandatorily programmed at 180/150 ms, and to up to 350 ms in the TG groups. The percentage of right ventricular pacing (%RVp) evaluated at 12-month post-implantation follow-ups were compared between the two groups in each arm. Additionally, in-clinic time required for collecting device data was compared between patients programmed with the automated AutoCapture algorithm activated (VAC ON) vs. the manually programmed method (VAC OFF). Results Patients randomized to the TG with the VIP algorithm activated exhibited a significantly lower %RVp at 12 months than those in the CG in both the cAVC arm (39±41% vs. 97±3%; p =0.0004) and the iAVC arm (15±25% vs. 68±39%; p =0.0067). In-clinic time required to collect device data was less in patients with the VAC algorithm activated. No device-related adverse events were reported during the year-long study period. Conclusions In our study cohort, the use of the VIP algorithm significantly reduced the %RVp, while the VAC algorithm reduced in-clinic time needed to collect device data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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4. Differential expression of apoptosis-associated genes in canine mammary tumors.
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Mitra, Namita, Verma, Ramneek, Deka, Dipak, Pawar, Hitesh N., Sood, Naresh K., Gupta, Kuldeep, Mahajan, Shashi K., and Mohindroo, Jitender
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- 2015
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5. Ultrasonographic features of normal heart and liver in relation to diagnose pericarditis in bovine.
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KUMAR, ASHWANI, SAINI, NARINDER S., MOHINDROO, JITENDER, and SOOD, NARESH K.
- Abstract
The article reports a study which was conducted to determine whether ultrasonography can help in diagnosis of pericarditis in bovine and examine the histopathological changes in liver associated with pericarditis. Histopathology of ultrasonography (USGB) samples confirmed sinusoidal dilatation in all the animals along with chronic active hepatitis and fatty liver. This indicates that ultrasonography is a reliable non-invasive tool to describe nature and severity of the pericardial effusions.
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- 2012
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6. Rodents as reservoirs of parasites in India.
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Singla, Lachhman D., Singla, Neena, Parshad, Vir R., Juyal, Prayag D., and Sood, Naresh K.
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HELMINTHS ,PARASITES ,RODENT behavior ,RATTUS rattus ,BANDICOTA ,BEHAVIOR - Abstract
We monitored the prevalence of endoparasitic infections of rodents in Punjab State, India, between January 2004 and December 2005. Three species of wild rodents, namely the house rat, Rattus rattus ( n= 42), the lesser bandicoot rat, Bandicota bengalensis ( n= 34) and the Indian gerbil, Tatera indica ( n= 15), were live-captured from houses and crop fields. Examination of various organs revealed that the highest rates of endoparasitic infection occurred in R. rattus (40.5%), followed by B. bengalensis (35.3 %) and then T. indica (20.0%), with an overall infection rate of 35.2%. All three rodent species were found naturally infected with one or more species of helminths. Metacestodes (1–6) of Cysticercus fasciolaris (larvae of Taenia taeniaeformis) were found in all three rodent species (in the liver). In one male T. indica, numerous robust T. taeniaeformis metacestodes were found in oval sacs attached to the mesentery and the abdominal wall, an unusual site. The cauda epididymal fluid of the same gerbil was also found to be infected with a very rare species of strongylid nematode, which could not be identified to genus or species level. It is possible that this nematode is transmitted sexually and thus may affect the reproductive potential of gerbils. This appears to be the first report of this phenomenon. In one B. bengalensis individual, the intestine was found to be obstructed with an acanthocephalan, Moniliformis moniliformis, with concurrent infection with C. fasciolaris in the form of multiple cysts in the liver. Although no natural protozoan infection was found in these field rodents, experimental Trypanosoma evansi infection has been established in all three species with high pathogenicity, and the possibility of sexual transmission was supported by the presence of T. evansi in the cauda epididymal fluid of male rats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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7. Cardiac amyloidosis--two case reports with variable presentation.
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Mohan B, Chhabra ST, Tandon R, Gupta NK, Aslam N, Sood NK, and Wander GS
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- Adult, Amyloidosis complications, Biopsy, Diagnosis, Differential, Echocardiography, Doppler, Color, Electrocardiography, Endoscopes, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Amyloidosis pathology, Heart Failure etiology
- Abstract
Many cases of progressive heart failure due to cardiac amyloidosis remain undiagnosed due to the rarity and lack of suspicion on part of physician. Treatment options are limited and patients are also poor responders in later stages. Hence, early diagnosis by recognition of syndromic presentation and diagnostic modalities is helpful in retarding the disease process.
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- 2011
8. Mechanical breakdown and intraembolus thrombolysis in massive pulmonary embolism.
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Aggarwal T, Kumar N, Mohan B, Mohindra R, Aslam N, Sood NK, and Wander GS
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- Adult, Humans, Male, Pulmonary Artery diagnostic imaging, Pulmonary Embolism diagnostic imaging, Pulmonary Embolism drug therapy, Radiography, Thrombolytic Therapy, Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator therapeutic use, Pulmonary Embolism therapy
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- 2005
9. Prevalence of sustained hypertension and obesity in urban and rural school going children in Ludhiana.
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Mohan B, Kumar N, Aslam N, Rangbulla A, Kumbkarni S, Sood NK, and Wander GS
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- Adolescent, Body Mass Index, Child, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, India epidemiology, Male, Prevalence, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, Urban Population statistics & numerical data, Hypertension epidemiology, Obesity epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Increasing trend of hypertension is a worldwide phenomenon. The data on sustained hypertension in school going children is scanty in India. The present study was conducted to evaluate the prevalence of sustained hypertension and obesity in apparently healthy school children in rural and urban areas of Ludhiana using standard criteria., Methods and Results: A total of 2467 apparently healthy adolescent school children aged between 11-17 years from urban area and 859 students from rural area were taken as subjects. Out of total 3326 students, 189 were found to have sustained hypertension; in urban areas prevalence of sustained hypertension was 6.69% (n=165) and in rural area it was 2.56% (n=24). Males outnumbered females in both rural and urban areas. The mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure of hypertensive population in both urban and rural population was significantly higher than systolic and diastolic blood pressure in their normotensive counterparts (urban normotensive systolic blood pressure:115.48+/-22.74 mmHg, urban hypertensive systolic blood pressure: 137.59+/-11.91 mmHg, rural normotensive systolic blood pressure: 106.31+/-19.86 mmHg, rural hypertensive systolic blood pressure: 131.63+/-10.13 mmHg, urban normotensive diastolic blood pressure: 74.18+/-17.41 mmHg, urban hypertensive diastolic blood pressure: 84.58+/-8.14 mmHg, rural normotensive diastolic blood pressure: 68.84+/-16.96 mmHg, rural hypertensive diastolic blood pressure: 79.15+/-7.41 mmHg). Overweight populationwas significantly higher in urban area. There were 287 (11.63%) overweight students and 58 (2.35%) were obese. In rural population overweight and obese students were 44 (4.7%) and 34 (3.63%) respectively. There was significant increase in prevalence of hypertension in both rural and urban population with increased body mass index in urban students; those with normal body mass index had prevalence of hypertension of 4.52% (n=96), in overweight it was 15.33% (n=44) and in obese it was 43.10% (n=25). In rural area, the overweight students showed prevalence of sustained hypertension in 6.82% (n=3) and in obese group it was 61.76% (n=21). None of the student with normal body mass index in rural area was found to be hypertensive. The mean body mass index of hypertensive population in both rural and urban areas was significantly higher than respective normotensive population (mean body mass index in urban normotensive group: 20.34+/-3.72 kg/m2, hypertensive group: 24.91+/-4.92 kg/m2; mean body mass index in rural normotensive group: 18.41+/-3.41 kg/m2, hypertensive group: 21.37+/-3.71 kg/m2, p<0.01)., Conclusions: Prevalence of sustained hypertension is on the rise in urban area even in younger age groups. Blood pressure is frequently elevated in obese children as compared to lean subjects. This is possibly related to their sedentary lifestyle, altered eating habits, increased fat content of diet and decreased physical activities.
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- 2004
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