50 results on '"Thomas, Mathai"'
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2. Retinal vascular changes in persons with cerebral small vessel disease
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Prasanth Varghese C, Krishna Teja Kandela, Fiju Chacko, and Monsy Thomas Mathai
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retinal vascular ,cerebral small vessel disease ,cerebral arterioles ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
The retinal and cerebral microvasculature share many morphological and physiological properties, Hence, it is thought that studying these retinal vessels will provide a direct measure to evaluate the vascular and neuronal status of the brain. In the present study, we aimed to study retinal vasculature by fundus examination in persons identified to have cerebral small vessel disease on MRI brain and an attempt to correlate the retinal vascular changes with the degree of MRI brain changes. A case control study was conducted in the department of Neurology, Jubilee Mission Medical College & Research Institute. A total of 180 patients, included 90 patients for case group (Cerebral small vessel disease on MRI brain) and 90 patients for control group (no cerebral small vessel disease on MRI brain) reporting to the neurology department were included in the study. Cerebral small vessel disease was identified and classified/graded as per the modified Fazeka Scale. Ophthalmoscopic examination was done using fundus camera with the help of the ophthalmologist. Results were expressed in percentages and the data obtained was analysed using standard analytical techniques using SPSS software. Majority of cases and controls were in the age group of 61-70 years. Majority of the cases were males 55 (61.1%). Majority of the controls were females 51 (56.7%). 42 (46.7%) cases and 34 (37.8%) controls were hypertensives. Cases with CSVD had a statistically significant association with arteriolar narrowing, AV crossing changes and optic disc edema when compared to controls. Retinal vascular changes were associated with increased cerebral vascular events. These associations persist after accounting for confounding variables known to be disease causing in both circulations.
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- 2024
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3. Diet of smooth-coated otter Lutrogale perspicillata (Geoffroy, 1826) in the Moyar River, Western Ghats, South India
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Kannadasan Narasimmarajan, Manu Thomas Mathai, Matt W. Hayward, and Sonaimuthu Palanivel
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Otters are constrained to aquatic ecosystems where they often perform the role of “apex” predators. Effective conservation of otters requires sufficient knowledge of their dietary resources. Our aim was to determine the diet of smooth-coated otter in the Moyar River, Western Ghats, to ensure they have sufficient nutritional resources for their conservation. Ninety spraints were examined, from which we identified sixteen fish species (six families), three crabs, one mollusc, and some insects. Cyprinidae family occurred more frequently in otter diet in the post-monsoon, winter, and summer seasons, while Cichlidae were eaten mainly in the summer (analysis of variance; F = 2.442; d.f. = 1; P = 0.2161). Smooth-coated otters specialized on fishes (98.39%), while crabs and molluscs comprised 1.39% of their diet (χ2= 28.809; d.f. = 9, P = 0.001). Fishes that were eaten were between 5 cm and 41 cm in length with Hypselobarbus micropogon, Labeo pangusia, and Hypselobarbus dubius the largest (15–41 cm), while Pethia conchonius and Cirrhinus reba were the smallest (4–8 cm). The feeding pattern of otters in the Moyar River was similar throughout the year (χ2 = 1.856; d.f. = 4, P = 0.3474). We conclude that the smooth-coated otters in the Moyar River are primarily piscivores. However, season-wise fish surveys occasionally revealed low fish diversity, and otter diet and feeding patterns did not alter significantly between seasons. It highlights the potential need for distinct conservation management aims for the fragile Moyar River habitats of the Western Ghats—a global biodiversity hotspot.
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- 2024
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4. Tissue engineering and chitosan: a wonder biomaterial
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Goli, Sowjanya, primary, Mudrakola, Durga Prasad, additional, Turagam, Neeraja, additional, Thomas, Mathai, additional, Asthana, Amit, additional, and Bhatnagar, Ira, additional
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- 2023
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5. List of contributors
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Alaswad, Saleh O., primary, Amirthalingam, Sivashanmugam, additional, Ammanath, Aparna Viswanathan, additional, Aneesh, T.P., additional, Anil, Sukumaran, additional, Anishma, Payyappilliparambil Narayanan, additional, Arjun, B., additional, Arunachalam, Prabhakarn, additional, Asthana, Amit, additional, Aswathy, K.N., additional, Athira, K.V., additional, Banerjee, Superna, additional, Benny, Sonu, additional, Bhaskar, Vaishnav, additional, Bhatnagar, Ira, additional, Chacko, Indhu Annie, additional, David, Nancy, additional, Devan, Aswathy R., additional, Goli, Sowjanya, additional, Hafsa, P.V., additional, Hwang, Nathaniel S., additional, Jayakumar, Rangasamy, additional, Jayasree, Anjana, additional, Jose, Anju, additional, Krishnendu, P.R., additional, Kumar, Vrinda S., additional, Mathew, Aparna Ann, additional, Mathew, Ligin, additional, Mohanan, Dhilin Pathayappurakkal, additional, Mohapathra, Sudeshna, additional, Mudrakola, Durga Prasad, additional, Murali, Vishnu Priya, additional, Murugan, Sesha Subramanian, additional, Muthuswamy, Shiva, additional, Nair, Aathira Sujathan, additional, Nair, Bhagyalakshmi, additional, Nair, Sreeja C., additional, Natesan, Subramanian, additional, Nath, Lekshmi R., additional, A.S., Niharika, additional, Panonnummal, Rajitha, additional, Pappachen, Leena K., additional, Pavithra, S., additional, Prabaharan, M., additional, Raj, N. Mincy, additional, Rajendran, Arun Kumar, additional, Ravichandiran, Velayutham, additional, M., Sabitha, additional, Sadanandan, Prashant, additional, Sah, Sunil Kumar, additional, Sapa, Harika, additional, Sathianarayanan, S., additional, Sathya Seeli, D., additional, Selvaprithiviraj, Vignesh, additional, Seong, Gi Hun, additional, Sreeja, V., additional, Sudha, P.N., additional, Sudheesh, M.S., additional, Thekkila-Veedu, Saranya, additional, Thomas, Jolly, additional, Thomas, Mathai, additional, Turagam, Neeraja, additional, Venkatesan, Jayachandran, additional, Vishnu, V.R., additional, Viswanad, Vidya, additional, Yegappan, Ramanathan, additional, and Zachariah, S.M., additional
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- 2023
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6. A comparative study on ocular manifestations in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome and healthy volunteers
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Rakendu Puthiyedath, Anthrayose C V. Kakkanatt, Monsy Thomas Mathai, Lola Ramachandran, Amitha Sunny, and Sreelakshmi Arun
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central corneal thickness ,polycystic ovarian syndrome ,retinal nerve fiber layer thickness ,schirmer's test ,tear breakup time ,Ophthalmology ,RE1-994 - Abstract
Background: Polycystic ovary syndrome is a common endocrinological disorder of females in the reproductive age group.It can produce changes in the ocular tissues and thereby affect vision.In this study,we aim to compare intraocular pressure, central corneal thickness, central macular thickness, retinal nerve fiber layer thickness, Schirmers test and tear break up time between the eyes of women with and without PCOS. Methods and Material: This study included 60 eye of 30 women with PCOS(Group 1) and 60 eyes of 30 healthy women (Group 2). Intraocular pressures (IOP) were assessed using Goldman applanation tonometry, central corneal thickness (CCT) using pachymeter, retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) and central macular thickness (CMT) using optical coherence tomography (OCT), Schirmers test using standardized strips and tear break up time (TBUT) were assessed for all women. Results: The Mean Central Corneal Thickness, average RNFL, superior average RNFL and nasal average RNFL thicknesses were higher in patients with PCOS than in healthy women (all p
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- 2022
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7. Emotional Threat Perception and Its Association with Neurocognition in Social Anxiety Disorder
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Anjali Thomas Mathai, Shweta Rai, and Rishikesh V. Behere
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Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Background: The negative appraisal of emotional stimuli is a feature of social anxiety disorder (SAD). People with SAD demonstrate deficits in neurocognitive performance while performing tasks of attention. However, the relationship between attentional control, working memory, and threat perception in SAD has not been studied well. The present study aimed to identify patterns of threat perception in relation to performance on attention and visuospatial working memory tasks in individuals with SAD. Methods: Subjects with SAD ( n = 27) and a healthy comparative (HC) group ( n = 26) completed tasks of sustained and focused attention, visuospatial working memory, computerized emotion identification, and pictorial emotional Stroop. Results: The SAD group had decreased performance in the domains of sustained (P = 0.001) and focused attention (P = 0.04). They also had an enhanced threat perception as demonstrated by greater reaction time to anger (P = 0.03), lower emotion recognition accuracy (P = 0.05), and higher over-identification of the threat to neutral and nonthreatening faces. However, the Stroop effect was not demonstrated across the groups. No group difference was seen in the performance on the visuospatial working memory tasks. Lower focused attention was significantly correlated with higher emotional threat perception (ETP; P = 0.001) in the SAD group. Conclusion: People with SAD have greater deficits in attention processing and ETP. The attention deficits were associated with enhanced ETP in social anxiety. The link between threat perception and cognitive functions would aid in a better understanding of SAD and in planning appropriate intervention.
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- 2022
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8. Adapting the Technology Performance Level Integrated Assessment Framework to Low-TRL Technologies Within the Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage Industry, Part I
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Nicole Mendoza, Thomas Mathai, Blake Boren, Jesse Roberts, James Niffenegger, Volker Sick, Arno W. Zimmermann, Jochem Weber, and Joshua Schaidle
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integrated assessment (IA) ,technology performance level (TPL) ,technology assessment framework (TAF) ,combined indicator ,technology development trajectory ,life cycle assessment (LCA) ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
With the urgent need to mitigate climate change and rising global temperatures, technological solutions that reduce atmospheric CO2 are an increasingly important part of the global solution. As a result, the nascent carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) industry is rapidly growing with a plethora of new technologies in many different sectors. There is a need to holistically evaluate these new technologies in a standardized and consistent manner to determine which technologies will be the most successful and competitive in the global marketplace to achieve decarbonization targets. Life cycle assessment (LCA) and techno-economic assessment (TEA) have been employed as rigorous methodologies for quantitatively measuring a technology's environmental impacts and techno-economic performance, respectively. However, these metrics evaluate a technology's performance in only three dimensions and do not directly incorporate stakeholder needs and values. In addition, technology developers frequently encounter trade-offs during design that increase one metric at the expense of the other. The technology performance level (TPL) combined indicator provides a comprehensive and holistic assessment of an emerging technology's potential, which is described by its techno-economic performance, environmental impacts, social impacts, safety considerations, market/deployability opportunities, use integration impacts, and general risks. TPL incorporates TEA and LCA outputs and quantifies the trade-offs between them directly using stakeholder feedback and requirements. In this article, the TPL methodology is being adapted from the marine energy domain to the CCUS domain. Adapted metrics and definitions, a stakeholder analysis, and a detailed foundation-based application of the systems engineering approach to CCUS are presented. The TPL assessment framework is couched within the internationally standardized LCA framework to improve technical rigor and acceptance. It is demonstrated how stakeholder needs and values can be directly incorporated, how LCA and TEA metrics can be balanced, and how other dimensions (listed earlier) can be integrated into a single metric that measures a technology's potential.
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- 2022
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9. Chitosan as biomaterial in drug delivery and tissue engineering
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Ahsan, Saad M., Thomas, Mathai, Reddy, Kranthi K., Sooraparaju, Sujata Gopal, Asthana, Amit, and Bhatnagar, Ira
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- 2018
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10. A Combination of Coconut Fiber Suture and Tamarind Seed Gel with Dehydrated Human Amnion Membrane for Wound Surgery in Rats
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Raghu Babu Pothireddy, Angeline Julius, Manu Thomas Mathai, Ganesh Lakshmanan, and Beimnet Asfaw Hailemariam
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Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Today, there are over 2,000 different biomaterials used for various medical applications, but none of these biomaterials are 100% compatible with all human beings. Coconut fiber is widely available but has not been tested as a safe natural alternative for sutures. Immature coconut fiber is nonabsorbable and is effective for cuts and open wounds when used in combination with dehydrated human amnion membrane (dHAM). Immature coconut fiber, tamarind seed polysaccharide (TSP), and dHAM were prepared to test their combinational effect on wound healing in rats. TSP enhanced cell viability, proliferation, and migration in human skin cells and cured wounds both individually and in combination with dHAM. An antibiotic-free combination of the human amniotic membrane with intact epithelium, tamarind seed polysaccharide, and immature coconut fiber provided faster wound healing. Significantly higher wound healing was seen on the 11th day based on an initial 10 mm biopsy punch surgery in Wistar rats compared to control groups. Histological studies revealed thickened dermis edges with more neutrophil infiltration. Collagen deposition in the dermis was homogeneous across the excised skin tissue in the test group, again attesting to the utility of this procedure. This research signifies the use of TSP gel together with the amnion membrane representing a “smart patch” with wound healing potential, which would encourage further research on the smart patch made using a combination of plant and animal biological materials.
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- 2021
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11. Traumatic Optic Neuropathy: Early Detection and Intervention in a Tertiary Care Centre
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Arino John, Andrews CV Kakkanatt, Monsy Thomas Mathai, Babu Urumeese Palatty, NI Kurian, and Aiswarya Sasidharan
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axonal loss in traumatic optic neuropathy ,circumpapillary retinal nerve fiber layer ,optical coherence tomography ,retinal ganglion cell complex ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Acute injury to the optic nerve resulting in vision loss is known as Traumatic Optic Neuropathy (TON). Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) documents the progression of damage of axons over time. Aim: To assess visual outcome of patients diagnosed with TON after management with intravenous (IV) steroids and to study Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer (RNFL) using OCT in patients with TON. Materials and Methods: An observational prospective study was conducted in a tertiary care centre, including 29 TON patients. IV steroids, methylprednisolone was administered in indirect TON patients. RNFL was assessed using OCT on the day of discharge. Follow-up for one week and one month after discharge. Paired t-test/Wilcoxon sign rank test was applied to test the mean differences of the study. Results: Patients treated with IV, steroids showed significant improvement over time. Patients with just Perception of Light (PL) or Hand Movements (HM+) did not show much improvement. Another factor for visual recovery was timing of steroid administration. The time limit was within 24 hours after the injury before full-fledged inflammation sets in. RNFL study using OCT showed reductions in circumpapillary RNFL thickness and Retinal Ganglion Cell (RGC) complex began to decrease at two weeks after trauma and plateaued at 20 weeks in all cases. Conclusion: IV steroids can be considered as a treatment of TON rather than wait for spontaneous recovery. But baseline visual acuity played a crucial role in recovery. OCT is a useful follow-up tool to analyse axonal loss. But a standard protocol is still lacking.
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- 2020
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12. Microclimate variables of the ambient environment deliver the actual estimates of the extrinsic incubation period of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum: a study from a malaria-endemic urban setting, Chennai in India
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Shalu Thomas, Sangamithra Ravishankaran, N. A. Johnson Amala Justin, Aswin Asokan, T. Maria Jusler Kalsingh, Manu Thomas Mathai, Neena Valecha, Jacqui Montgomery, Matthew B. Thomas, and Alex Eapen
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Extrinsic incubation period ,Microclimate ,Relative humidity ,Daily temperature range ,Anopheles stephensi ,Man hour density ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Environmental factors such as temperature, relative humidity and their daily variation influence a range of mosquito life history traits and hence, malaria transmission. The standard way of characterizing environmental factors with meteorological station data need not be the actual microclimates experienced by mosquitoes within local transmission settings. Methods A year-long study was conducted in Chennai, India to characterize local temperature and relative humidity (RH). Data loggers (Hobos) were placed in a range of probable indoor and outdoor resting sites of Anopheles stephensi. Recordings were taken hourly to estimate mean temperature and RH, together with daily temperature range (DTR) and daily relative humidity range. The temperature data were used to explore the predicted variation in extrinsic incubation period (EIP) of Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax between microhabitats and across the year. Results Mean daily temperatures within the indoor settings were significantly warmer than those recorded outdoors. DTR in indoor environments was observed to be modest and ranged from 2 to 6 °C. Differences in EIP between microhabitats were most notable during the hottest summer months of April–June, with parasite development predicted to be impaired for tiled houses and overhead tanks. Overall, the prevailing warm and stable conditions suggest rapid parasite development rate regardless of where mosquitoes might rest. Taking account of seasonal and local environmental variation, the predicted EIP of P. falciparum varied from a minimum of 9.1 days to a maximum of 15.3 days, while the EIP of P. vivax varied from 8.0 to 24.3 days. Conclusions This study provides a detailed picture of the actual microclimates experienced by mosquitoes in an urban slum malaria setting. The data indicate differences between microhabitats that could impact mosquito and parasite life history traits. The predicted effects for EIP are often relatively subtle, but variation between minimum and maximum EIPs can play a role in disease transmission, depending on the time of year and where mosquitoes rest. Appropriate characterization of the local microclimate conditions would be the key to fully understand the effects of environment on local transmission ecology.
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- 2018
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13. History of psychiatry: An Indian perspective
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Anand Mishra, Thomas Mathai, and Daya Ram
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History ,India ,psychiatry ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 ,Industrial psychology ,HF5548.7-5548.85 - Abstract
A knowledge of history becomes important in learning the way concepts have evolved and how they are understood in different and conflicting traditions in psychiatry. Modern psychiatry and its history has always been observed through the prism of western science which has its own evolutionary line in which the eastern sciences can't fit and are always at a disadvantage. Especially the colonial bid to prove its legitimacy as a civilizing mission led to representation of European medicine as morally superior to the eastern practices resulting in a biased history. Though in reality, the history of psychiatry is heterogeneous and consists of many different scientific and cultural traditions which vary between populations. hence the Indian concept of “unmada” can't be compared or conformed to “schizophrenia” without addressing its cultural and historical contexts. Many suggest that in case of Indian patients, an understanding of illness through a Vedantic model of psych seems more appealing in comparison to the western constructs, as such an attitude has been transferred over generations. Therefore, a knowledge of history of psychiatry, especially from an Indian perspective becomes important.
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- 2018
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14. Socio-demographic and household attributes may not necessarily influence malaria: evidence from a cross sectional study of households in an urban slum setting of Chennai, India
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Shalu Thomas, Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Aswin Asokan, N. A. Johnson Amala Justin, T. Maria Jusler Kalsingh, Manu Thomas Mathai, Neena Valecha, and Alex Eapen
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Urban malaria ,Breeding habitats ,Overhead tanks ,Occupation ,Approachability ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Household and environmental factors are reported to influence the malaria endemicity of a place. Hence, a careful assessment of these factors would, potentially help in locating the possible areas under risk to plan and adopt the most suitable and appropriate malaria control strategies. Methods A cross-sectional household survey was carried out in the study site, Besant Nagar, Chennai, through random sampling method from February 2014 to February 2015. A structured interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to assess selected variables of demography, structural particulars of a household, usage of repellents, animals on site, presence of breeding habitats and any mosquito/vector breeding in the household, malaria/vector control measures undertaken by government in each houses. The data was collected through one to one personal interview method, statistically analysed overall and compared between the households/people infected with malaria within a period of 1 year and their non-infected counterparts of the same area. Results Presence of malaria was found to be significantly associated with the occupation, number of inhabitants, presence of a separate kitchen, availability of overhead tanks and cisterns, immatures of vector mosquitoes, presence of mosquito breeding and type of roof structures (p
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- 2018
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15. 20 - Tissue engineering and chitosan: a wonder biomaterial
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Goli, Sowjanya, Mudrakola, Durga Prasad, Turagam, Neeraja, Thomas, Mathai, Asthana, Amit, and Bhatnagar, Ira
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- 2023
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16. Emotional Threat Perception and Its Association with Neurocognition in Social Anxiety Disorder
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Rishikesh V. Behere, Anjali Thomas Mathai, and Shweta Rai
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Clinical Psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Feature (computer vision) ,Social anxiety ,Emotional stimuli ,Threat perception ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,Neurocognitive ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background: The negative appraisal of emotional stimuli is a feature of social anxiety disorder (SAD). People with SAD demonstrate deficits in neurocognitive performance while performing tasks of attention. However, the relationship between attentional control, working memory, and threat perception in SAD has not been studied well. The present study aimed to identify patterns of threat perception in relation to performance on attention and visuospatial working memory tasks in individuals with SAD. Methods: Subjects with SAD ( n = 27) and a healthy comparative (HC) group ( n = 26) completed tasks of sustained and focused attention, visuospatial working memory, computerized emotion identification, and pictorial emotional Stroop. Results: The SAD group had decreased performance in the domains of sustained (P = 0.001) and focused attention (P = 0.04). They also had an enhanced threat perception as demonstrated by greater reaction time to anger (P = 0.03), lower emotion recognition accuracy (P = 0.05), and higher over-identification of the threat to neutral and nonthreatening faces. However, the Stroop effect was not demonstrated across the groups. No group difference was seen in the performance on the visuospatial working memory tasks. Lower focused attention was significantly correlated with higher emotional threat perception (ETP; P = 0.001) in the SAD group. Conclusion: People with SAD have greater deficits in attention processing and ETP. The attention deficits were associated with enhanced ETP in social anxiety. The link between threat perception and cognitive functions would aid in a better understanding of SAD and in planning appropriate intervention.
- Published
- 2022
17. Ocean Energy Systems Wave Energy Modelling Task: Modelling, Verification and Validation of Wave Energy Converters
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Fabian Wendt, Kim Nielsen, Yi-Hsiang Yu, Harry Bingham, Claes Eskilsson, Morten Kramer, Aurélien Babarit, Tim Bunnik, Ronan Costello, Sarah Crowley, Benjamin Gendron, Giuseppe Giorgi, Simone Giorgi, Samuel Girardin, Deborah Greaves, Pilar Heras, Johan Hoffman, Hafizul Islam, Ken-Robert Jakobsen, Carl-Erik Janson, Johan Jansson, Hyun Yul Kim, Jeong-Seok Kim, Kyong-Hwan Kim, Adi Kurniawan, Massimiliano Leoni, Thomas Mathai, Bo-Woo Nam, Sewan Park, Krishnakumar Rajagopalan, Edward Ransley, Robert Read, John V. Ringwood, José Miguel Rodrigues, Benjamin Rosenthal, André Roy, Kelley Ruehl, Paul Schofield, Wanan Sheng, Abolfazl Shiri, Sarah Thomas, Imanol Touzon, and Imai Yasutaka
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wave energy ,numerical modelling ,simulation ,boundary element method ,computational fluid dynamics ,Naval architecture. Shipbuilding. Marine engineering ,VM1-989 ,Oceanography ,GC1-1581 - Abstract
The International Energy Agency Technology Collaboration Programme for Ocean Energy Systems (OES) initiated the OES Wave Energy Conversion Modelling Task, which focused on the verification and validation of numerical models for simulating wave energy converters (WECs). The long-term goal is to assess the accuracy of and establish confidence in the use of numerical models used in design as well as power performance assessment of WECs. To establish this confidence, the authors used different existing computational modelling tools to simulate given tasks to identify uncertainties related to simulation methodologies: (i) linear potential flow methods; (ii) weakly nonlinear Froude−Krylov methods; and (iii) fully nonlinear methods (fully nonlinear potential flow and Navier−Stokes models). This article summarizes the code-to-code task and code-to-experiment task that have been performed so far in this project, with a focus on investigating the impact of different levels of nonlinearities in the numerical models. Two different WECs were studied and simulated. The first was a heaving semi-submerged sphere, where free-decay tests and both regular and irregular wave cases were investigated in a code-to-code comparison. The second case was a heaving float corresponding to a physical model tested in a wave tank. We considered radiation, diffraction, and regular wave cases and compared quantities, such as the WEC motion, power output and hydrodynamic loading.
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- 2019
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18. Does hip structural analysis confer additional benefit to routine BMD assessment in postmenopausal women with hip fracture? A study from a tertiary center in southern India
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Johns T. Johnson, Kripa Elizabeth Cherian, Nitin Kapoor, Felix K. Jebasingh, Hesarghatta Shyamsunder Asha, Thomas Mathai, Manasseh Nithyananth, Anil Thomas Oommen, Alfred Job Daniel, Nihal Thomas, and Thomas Vizhalil Paul
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Postmenopause ,Absorptiometry, Photon ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Bone Density ,Femur Neck ,Hip Fractures ,Humans ,Female ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Osteoporosis, Postmenopausal - Abstract
This study from southern India showed that proximal hip geometry was significantly impaired in postmenopausal women with femoral neck fracture. The trabecular bone score (TBS), which is reflective of bone microarchitecture, was also significantly impaired in patients with fracture.There is limited information with regard to comprehensive bone health in Indian postmenopausal women with neck of femur fracture. We studied the bone mineral density (BMD), trabecular bone score (TBS), proximal hip geometry, and bone mineral biochemistry in postmenopausal women with and without femoral neck fractures.This was a cross-sectional study conducted at a tertiary care center in South India. BMD, TBS, and hip structural analysis (HSA) were assessed using a dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scanner. Bone mineral biochemical profiles were also studied.A total of 90 postmenopausal women with acute femoral neck fracture with mean (SD) age of 63.2 (6.1) years and 90 age-matched controls were included. The prevalence of osteoporosis was higher among cases as compared to controls (83.3% vs 47.8%; P 0.001). Degraded bone microarchitecture (TBS value 1.200) was more frequent among women with hip fracture as compared to controls (46.7% vs 31.1%; P = 0.032). Cross-sectional moment of inertia (CSMI) was significantly lower at the narrow neck (NN) and inter-trochanteric (IT) region in cases (P 0.05) and buckling ratio (BR) was significantly higher at all three sites in postmenopausal women with femoral neck fracture as compared controls. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that femoral neck osteoporosis, low CSMI at NN and high BR at NN and femoral shaft emerged as factors significantly associated with femoral neck fractures.This study highlights that impaired parameters of proximal hip geometry and a low trabecular bone score may be significantly associated with femoral neck fractures in postmenopausal women.
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- 2022
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19. Hypovitaminosis D and Other Risk Factors of Femoral Neck Fracture in South Indian Postmenopausal Women: A Pilot Study
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Thomas V. Paul, Sivan Arul Selvan, Hesarghatta Shyamasunder Asha, Nihal Thomas, Krishnan Venkatesh, Anil Thomas Oommen, Thomas Mathai, and MandalamSubramanian Seshadri
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sedative use ,vitamin-d deficiency ,visual impairment ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: Non-communicable diseases like hip fractures are a significant problem in a developing country like India. The risk factors for hip fractures vary according to local practices and the availability of preventive health care delivery systems. There is paucity of data on risk factors for hip fracture in the south Indian population. Aim: This study was undertaken to assess risk factors associated with femoral neck (FN) fracture in South Indian postmenopausal women along with subsequent one year mortality. Materials and Methods: One hundred four postmenopausal women with FN fracture and 104 age and BMI matched controls were included. Sedative use, visual impairment and other relevant risk factors were assessed. Bone biochemistry and Bone Mineral Density (BMD) were evaluated. A telephonic interview was done at the end of one year to ascertain the well-being. Results: Sedative use, visual impairment, low FN BMD and vitamin-D deficiency (
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- 2015
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20. Does the roof type of a house influence the presence of adult Anopheles stephensi, urban malaria vector? - Evidence from a few slum settings in Chennai, India
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Alex Eapen, Vasna Joshua, Aswin Asokan, Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Shalu Thomas, Manu Thomas Mathai, and N. A. Johnson Amala Justin
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Veterinary medicine ,Plasmodium vivax ,India ,Mosquito Vectors ,Article ,stomatognathic system ,Malaria elimination ,Poverty Areas ,parasitic diseases ,Anopheles ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Anopheles stephensi ,General Veterinary ,biology ,fungi ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Culex quinquefasciatus ,Malaria ,Urban malaria ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Parasitology ,Female ,Slum - Abstract
In an urban setting, it is a difficult task to collect adult Anopheles stephensi, unlike the immature stages, due to various reasons. A longitudinal study was undertaken from January 2016 to April 2017, with CDC light traps to collect adult Anopheles stephensi and other mosquito species in houses located in a few slums of Chennai, India. A total of 203 trap collections were made indoors from human dwellings having different roof types, as well as outdoors. Three to four trap collections were made at night (18:00 to 06:00 h) once a week. Overall, Culex quinquefasciatus (64%) was the predominant mosquito species captured, followed by An. stephensi (24%). In 98 of the 203 trap collections (48.3%), at least one female An. stephensi was trapped. In all, 224 female An. stephensi were trapped, of which the majority were collected during monsoon and winter seasons. Compared to outdoors, 10% more An. stephensi, the majority of them unfed, were collected indoors, with relatively more contribution coming from asbestos-roofed houses (71.4%), followed by thatched-roof houses (47.3%). Overall, 2.2% positivity for Plasmodium vivax was detected in An. stephensi through Circumsporozoite-ELISA. Binary logistic regression model indicated that season (winter and monsoon), asbestos-roofed dwelling, lesser number of rooms in a house, and more members in a family were significant predictor variables for the odds of trapping an An. stephensi. The study brought out significant factors associated with the presence of An. stephensi in urban slums setting in Chennai, where malaria is declining. The findings would help in devising targeted, effective vector control interventions for malaria elimination in urban settings.
- Published
- 2021
21. Mazabraud syndrome
- Author
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Anulekha Mary John, Kishore Kumar Behera, Thomas Mathai, Harshad Parmar, and Thomas V Paul
- Subjects
Fibous dysplasia ,intramuscular myxoma ,mazabraud syndrome ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
A 25 year old lady presented with pain and swelling of left thigh. On examination she was found to have tenderness of left femur with a separate soft tissue swelling within the thigh muscle. Further evaluation revealed expansile bony lesion on X-ray of left tibia and multiple hot spots on bone scan suggestive of fibrous dysplasia. The soft tissue swelling on excision and histopathological examination was found to be intramuscular myxoma. The combination of the above two, called Mazabraud syndrome is being reported.
- Published
- 2013
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22. Multifocal tuberculosis verrucosa cutis
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Jiby Rajan, Ashok Thomas Mathai, P.V.S Prasad, and P K Kaviarasan
- Subjects
Multifocal ,cutaneous ,tuberculosis ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Tuberculosis has been a well-known affliction of human kind, since antiquity. Cutaneous tuberculosis constitutes only a small proportion of extra pulmonary tuberculosis and multifocal involvement of cutaneous tuberculosis is an even rarer manifestation. We report one such case of multifocal tuberculosis verrucosa cutis in a 17-year old male patient in the absence of any primary tuberculous focus.
- Published
- 2011
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23. Are Dawn Collections of Anopheles stephensi a Better Method To Estimate the Resting Vector Density? A Study from Chennai, India
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Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Shalu Thomas, Manu Thomas Mathai, N. A. Johnson Amala Justin, Aswin Asokan, and Alex Eapen
- Subjects
Population Density ,Veterinary medicine ,Vector control ,biology ,India ,Mosquito Vectors ,Disease Vectors ,biology.organism_classification ,Article ,Malaria ,Infectious Diseases ,Malaria transmission ,Virology ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Larva ,Anopheles ,Animals ,Humans ,Parasitology ,Cattle ,Current vector ,Longitudinal Studies ,Anopheles stephensi - Abstract
The study was an attempt to capture Anopheles stephensi from cattle sheds during dawn to understand the realistic density of the resting mosquitoes. A 2-year longitudinal study was carried out in cattle sheds in close proximity to the human dwellings to collect the resting vector mosquitoes. The man-hour density of An. stephensi ranged from 24.7 to 206.5. The vector incrimination results indicated 0.15% of An. stephensi infected with Pv210 in 2015 and 0.09% in 2016. The current study indicated that cattle sheds are still the preferred resting place of An. stephensi and that dawn is the perfect time to collect and estimate its densities. Hence, adult vector control may also be given due importance in addition to the routine larval source management measures to curb malaria transmission in an urban setting.
- Published
- 2020
24. Assessment of the Effectiveness of Various Adult Mosquito Sampling Methods in a Thickly Populated Urban Slum Settlement - A study from Besant Nagar, Chennai, India
- Author
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Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Aswin Asokan, Johnson Amala Justin N A, Shalu Thomas, Vasna Joshua, Manu Thomas Mathai, and Alex Eapen
- Abstract
BackgroundIn an urban scenario, it is an arduous task to collect adult Anopheles stephensi, unlike the immature forms due to various reasons such as the complex spatial heterogeneity, intricacies in feeding, and resting preferences. Thus it is necessary to have more specific and accurate assessments of adult vector density by performing various collection methods and timeframes to achieve appropriate and sustainable vector control strategies.Methods The study was undertaken in two phases, (i) resting dawn collections in cattle sheds from Jan 2015 to Dec 2016 to assess the possibility of maximum collection of An. stephensi compared to dusk collections done previously and to find out the best appropriate collection strategy for vector control and (ii) light trap collections from Jan 2016 to Apr 2017 to determine the efficiency and reliability of CDC light trap in sampling the anophelines including the urban malaria vector, Anopheles stephensi in human dwellings besides, other mosquito species. The man-hour density of An. stephensi in cattle sheds were calculated and its infection rate was analyzed by circum-sporozoite ELISA (CS-ELISA). Binary logistic regression analysis was done to ascertain the variables associated with the collection of Anopheles stephensi using a light trap.Results The resting collections in cattle sheds indicated that dawn collections yielded more Anopheles stephensi than at dusk. The resting stage female (fully fed, semi-gravid, and gravid) mosquitoes were more in dawn collections than in dusk collections. The CDC-light trap collections revealed that An. stephensi collected indoors were more than outdoor in human dwellings. Further, vector incrimination results observed that 0.56% of the female An. stephensi from cattle sheds were infected in 2014 (dusk), 0.15%, and 0.09% in 2015 and 2016 respectively in dawn collections. Nevertheless, 2.3% of An. stephensi collected by CDC light trap in human dwellings were positive for Plasmodium vivax (Pv210) infection. Binary logistic regression analysis proved that the presence of An. stephensi in human dwellings was significantly influenced by seasons, the number of rooms in the house, number of household members, and also the use of repellents.ConclusionsThe different collection (resting and light trap) approaches were assessed to find out the appropriate collection method and time which could yield the maximum number of An. stephensi with the existing resources. The study revealed that dawn collections during the early hours as the most suitable time to collect wild An. stephensi in an urban setting. The present study thus would help in chalking out an operationally feasible vector control strategy with the most appropriate methodology, timeframe useful for effective control of vectors.
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- 2020
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25. Cytomorphometric Analysis on the Effects of Components of Orthodontic Appliances on the Epithelial Cells of the Buccal Mucosa
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Francis, P. G., Thomas, Mathai, Antony, Vincy, Shaloob, Muhammed, Hassan, K. Jubin, and Roshan, Gazanafer
- Subjects
micronuclei ,genotoxicity ,Original Article ,Cytomorphometry - Abstract
Aim: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of fixed orthodontic appliances on the epithelial cells of buccal mucosa in patients undergoing orthodontic treatment. Materials and Methods: The study group included 30 healthy patients who were advised orthodontic treatment. Applying sterile cement spatula, scrapping of exfoliated buccal epithelial cells was performed from the middle part of the inner cheeks before starting the orthodontic treatment and at 1st week, 2nd week, 1 month, and 45 days after the treatment, followed by smearing and staining with Papanicolaou stain. Light microscope was used to score micronuclei, and independent two-tailed t-test was used for statistical analysis. Results: Micronuclei were assessed during the various stages of treatment and were recorded accordingly. At 1 week, there was increase in micronuclei number compared to before starting the treatment (day 0) and at 15th day; 30th day showed decrease in number compared to 1 week but increase compared to day 0. The results of day 45 were almost equal to day 0 with a significant P value (P < 0.001). Conclusion: Fixed orthodontic appliances induce increased micronuclei frequency, especially in the first weeks of treatment, however, these genotoxic effects tend to approach baseline levels in later period.
- Published
- 2017
26. A Study on the Parents Perspective Regarding the Impulse Buying behaviour of Children in Retail Outlets of Cochin City with Special Reference to Snacks
- Author
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Sagini Thomas Mathai and Dharmaraj Dr.A.
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Impulse (psychology) ,Advertising ,Psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2017
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27. iHersilia/iiaadi/iPravalikha, Srinivasuluamp; Srinivasulu, 2014 a junior synonym ofiHersilia savignyi/iLucas, 1836 (Araneae: Hersiliidae)
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Benaiah Ebenezer Johnson, John T.D. Caleb, G.B. Pravalikha, Manu Thomas Mathai, Soreiphy Mungkung, and Mitemlu Manyu
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Male ,Spider ,biology ,Zoology ,India ,Hersilia savignyi ,Spiders ,biology.organism_classification ,Type species ,Genus ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The genus Hersilia was established by Audouin in 1826 with H. caudata Audouin, 1826 as the type species. It is the most speciose hersiliid genus presently comprising 79 described species worldwide (World Spider Catalog 2017, version 18). There are seven species known from India: H. aadi Pravalikha, Srinivasulu & Srinivasulu, 2014, H. longivulva Sen et al., 2010, H. orvakalensis Javed et al., 2010, H. savignyi Lucas, 1836, H. striata Wang & Yin, 1985, H. sumatrana (Thorell, 1890), H. tibialis Baehr & Baehr, 1993. This paper is based on fresh material collected from the patches of scrub jungle enclosed within the Madras Christian College campus, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. Both sexes of H. savignyi are illustrated. H. aadi Pravalikha, Srinivasulu & Srinivasulu, 2014 is synonymized with H. savignyi Lucas, 1836.
- Published
- 2017
28. Knowledge and attitude of school teachers toward thumb-sucking habit in children.
- Author
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Birra, Vinod, Thomas, Mathai, Reddy Ealla, Kranti, Kumar, Vinod, Marri, Sowmya, Mudrakola, Durga, and Shivanna, Veena
- Subjects
- *
TEACHERS , *TEACHER attitudes , *PRIMARY school teachers , *ORAL habits , *HABIT - Abstract
Background: Thumb sucking is the most prevalent oral habits among toddlers infants and children. Children spend considerable amount of time in school. Hence, school teachers, especially primary school teachers can play an important role in developing health habits in their students. There are lack of studies on the assessment of teacher's knowledge and attitude about thumb-sucking habit. Aim: The study was undertaken to determine the knowledge and attitude of school teachers toward thumb-sucking habit in children. Methodology: Pretested questionnaires that involved paper and pen were distributed to the study participants in person and the filled questionnaires were collected on the same day. Then, the completely filled questionnaires were statistically analyzed using descriptive statistics (percentage). Results: Many respondents were unaware of thumb-sucking habit. High percentage of the study participants adopted similar methods to stop thumb-sucking habit in school children. Many teachers indicated that the Internet was the leading source of information about thumb-sucking habit. Furthermore, many teachers were willing to learn more about the prevention and management of the thumb-sucking habit. Most of the study participants felt that counseling of parents and child is very important to stop the habit. Large percentages of teachers were unaware of the role of the dentist in the management of thumb-sucking habit and its associated malocclusion. Conclusion: In this study, the primary school teachers lack the knowledge about thumb-sucking habit in children and their attitude was also found to be unsatisfactory. They need educational programs and symposiums to update their knowledge about the pernicious oral habits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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29. Geotechnical Surveys Indicate Potential Offshore Port Facilities off Subarnarekha Outflow Sector, Orissa, India
- Author
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Thomas Mathai, K. N. Rajarama, M. L. Renjith, and A. K. Samadder
- Subjects
Hydrology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ocean Engineering ,Silt ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,Oceanography ,Port (computer networking) ,Geological survey ,Submarine pipeline ,Outflow ,Geotechnical engineering ,Bathymetry ,Reef ,Geology ,Channel (geography) - Abstract
Deficiency in major port facilities off Orissa prompted the State Government to promote development of a port facility in the Subarnarekha river outflow sector utilizing the inland water network of Orissa coast canal and Contai canal. Marine and Coastal Surveys Division of Geological Survey of India carried out geotechnical feasibility surveys to explore possibilities of setting up a port facility in this sector. Bathymetry reveals smooth, parallel isobaths signifying gentle slopes with varying gradients. The East-West profile delineates a natural channel that could be dredged into a navigational channel. Sediments are dominantly sandy silt marginally varying either into silty sand or clayey silt. Geotechnical characteristics suggest a stable substratum ideal for developing the offshore port facility. Side-scan sonar surveys reveal a seafloor bereft of any hazardous rocks or reefs. The surveys espouse immense potential for developing this sector into an offshore port facility.
- Published
- 2014
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30. Personality - its impact on impulse buying behaviour among the retail customers in Kochin city
- Author
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R. Haridas and Sagini Thomas Mathai
- Subjects
Entertainment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Impulse (psychology) ,Personality ,Advertising ,Business ,Marketing ,Big Five personality traits ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,media_common - Abstract
The proliferance of organised retail in the form of malls & brand outlets has brought in a sea change in the shopping habits of Indian customers, who considers this as an entertainment. This trend was accentuated with the buying capacity of customers. This has led to the rapid increase in impulse buying behaviour. Majority of the customers are deciding their purchases inside the store due to in store stimuli, availability of credit cards and the influence of the sales staff or the fellow customers and sometimes because of customer's personality traits. This study investigates on the influence of /relations between the impulse buying on different personality traits among the retail customers in Kochin city. Big Five Personality test has been used as an instrument to reveal the relationship between these two factors.
- Published
- 2014
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31. The World at Your Fingertips: Western Union's Value-Added Services.
- Author
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Thomas Mathai
- Published
- 1984
32. Overhead tank is the potential breeding habitat of Anopheles stephensi in an urban transmission setting of Chennai, India
- Author
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Neena Valecha, Alex Eapen, Aswin Asokan, Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Matthew B. Thomas, Johnson A. Justin, Shalu Thomas, and Manu Thomas Mathai
- Subjects
030231 tropical medicine ,Population ,India ,Mosquito Vectors ,Breeding ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anopheles ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Ecosystem ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cities ,education ,Anopheles stephensi ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Research ,fungi ,Water ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Vector control ,Breed ,Chennai ,Infectious Diseases ,Habitat ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Parasitology ,Malaria ,Urban malaria - Abstract
Background: Wells and overhead tanks (OHT) are the major breeding sources of the local malaria vector, Anopheles stephensi in the Indian city of Chennai; they play a significant role in vector breeding, and transmission of urban malaria. Many other man-made breeding habitats, such as cemented cisterns/containers, barrels or drums, sumps or underground tanks, and plastic pots/containers are maintained to supplement water needs, temporarily resulting in enhanced mosquito/vector breeding. Correlating breeding habitats with immature vector abundance is important in effective planning to strengthen operational execution of vector control measures. Methods: A year-long, weekly study was conducted in Chennai to inspect available clear/clean water mosquito breeding habitats. Different breeding features, such as instar-wise, immature density and co-inhabitation with other mosquito species, were analysed. The characteristics of breeding habitats, i.e., type of habitat, water temperature and presence of aquatic organisms, organic matter and green algal remnants on the water surface at the time of inspection, were also studied. Immature density of vector was correlated with presence of other mosquito species, malaria prevalence, habitat characteristics and monthly/seasonal fluctuations. All the data collected from field observations were analysed using standard statistical tools. Results: When the immature density of breeding habitats was analysed, using one-way ANOVA, it was observed that the density did not change in a significant way either across seasons or months. OHTs contributed significantly to the immature population when compared to wells and other breeding habitats of the study site. The habitat positivity of wells and OHTs was significantly associated with the presence of aquatic organisms, organic matter and algal remnants. Significant correlations of malaria prevalence with monthly immature density, as well as number of breeding habitats with immature vector mosquitoes, were also observed. Conclusions: The findings that OHTs showed fairly high and consistent immature density of An. stephensi irrespective of seasons indicates the potentiality of the breeding habitat in contributing to vector density. The correlation between vector breeding habitats, immature density and malaria prevalence indicates the proximity of these habitats to malaria cases, proving its role in vector abundance and local malaria transmission. The preference of An. stephensi to breed in OHTs calls for intensified, appropriate and sustained intervention measures to curtail vector breeding and propagation to shrink malaria to pre-elimination level and beyond.
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- 2016
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33. A new jumping spider of the genus Stenaelurillus Simon, 1886 from India (Araneae: Salticidae: Aelurillina)
- Author
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John T D, Caleb and Manu Thomas, Mathai
- Subjects
Male ,Asia ,Animal Structures ,Animals ,Body Size ,India ,Female ,Spiders ,Organ Size ,Animal Distribution ,Ecosystem - Abstract
The genus Stenaelurillus Simon, 1886 is known from 35 species worldwide, including 27 species from Africa and eight from Asia (four species known from India, one from Iran, one from China, one from Tibet and one from Vietnam) (World Spider Catalog 2016). The four species known from India are S. albus Sebastian et al., 2015, S. jagannathae Das, MalikVidhel, 2015, S. lesserti Reimoser, 1934 and S. sarojinae CalebMathai, 2014 (Prószyński 2015; World Spider Catalog 2016). The present paper contains description of Stenaelurillus metallicus sp. nov., discovered from scrub jungle remnants of tropical dry evergreen forests, a unique habitat found in Madras Christian College campus, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.
- Published
- 2016
34. Geotechnical Aspects of Clayey Sediments Off Badagara on the Kerala Coast, India
- Author
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M. R. Asoka Kumar, Thomas Mathai, M. Suresh Chandran, Satish Kumar, and K. N. Rajarama
- Subjects
Shore ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sediment ,Ocean Engineering ,Present day ,Silt ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,Oceanography ,Comparative evaluation ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Geotechnical engineering ,Submarine pipeline ,Geology - Abstract
Offshore geotechnical surveys form part of an integrated investigation to rejuvenate a decrepit minor port at Badagara, Kerala on the southwestern coast of India. The sediments typify a fluvio-marine milieu ranging from silty clay, sand, silty sand, sandy silt and clayey silt. Geotechnical and sedimentological studies of shallow cores reveal the geotechnical aspects besides the depositional history of the sediments. Downcore geotechnical variations and regressive coefficients based on their inter-relationships highlight diverse factorial inferences. X-Ray Diffraction data indicate the prominent clay type. A comparative evaluation of the geotechnical characteristics of clayey sediments off Badagara, with similar studies along various sectors of the Kerala coast, both on land as well as in the near shore, is broadly attempted. Geotechnical studies carried out earlier on the uplifted Cochin marine clays provide comparative data for evaluating the possible variations between present day marine clayey sediment...
- Published
- 2012
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35. Geotechnical Characteristics of Marine Sediments in Selected Sectors off West Coast of India vis-a-vis Provenances
- Author
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M. R. Asoka Kumar, M. Suresh Chandran, Thomas Mathai, K. N. Rajarama, and Satish Kumar
- Subjects
Provenance ,Void ratio ,Lithology ,Sediment ,Ocean Engineering ,Geotechnical engineering ,Atterberg limits ,Silt ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,Oceanography ,Water content ,Texture (geology) ,Geology - Abstract
Geotechnical parameters of three selected sectors in the nearshore waters off West Coast of India, viz. (1) Kandla, Gujarat, (2) Devgarh, Maharashtra and (3) Tadri, Karnataka, having three different provenances, are discussed in this paper. As the geotechnical parameters are also likely to change in accordance with composition and texture of the sediments, silty clay and clayey silt samples only were selected so as to maintain homogeneity. Studies confirm that the nature and composition of marine clayey sediment from shelf area to a large extent are dependent on the lithology of hinterland. It is observed that in the Kandla area, where hinterland is mainly composed of sedimentaries, the values of geotechnical parameters like water content, wet unit weight, void ratio, porosity, liquid limit, plastic limit, plasticity index, and liquidity index are low, whereas in the Tadri area, where hinterland is mainly crystallines and metasedimentaries, the values are relatively higher. In Devgarh area, where the prov...
- Published
- 2010
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36. A Comparative Evaluation of the Geotechnical Index Properties of Clayey Sediments along the West Coast of India
- Author
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Thomas Mathai, M. R. Asoka Kumar, SruthiS Nair, M. Suresh Chandran, Satish Kumar, Pradeep Kumar, T. Stephen George, and K. N. Rajarama
- Subjects
Shore ,geography ,Index (economics) ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ocean Engineering ,Geotechnical engineering ,West coast ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,Oceanography ,Sediment core ,Geology ,Seafloor spreading ,Comparative evaluation - Abstract
Sediment core samples collected during geotechnical surveys along the West Coast of India in the near shore areas of Arabian Sea have generated data on the geotechnical index properties of clayey sediments up to nearly 5 m depth below seafloor. A comparative study of three sectors within themselves is attempted before carrying out a final evaluation between the sectors. Cohesive clayey sediments of Gujarat sector are comparable though widely variant in a few aspects; in the Maharashtra-Goa-Karnataka sector though, plasticity levels and clay type vary, and activity and consistency levels are quite similar. Though broadly comparable, the clayey sediments of Kerala-Tamilnadu sector have quite diverse characteristics that fail to conform to any particular pattern as each area has an exclusive set of geotechnical properties.
- Published
- 2007
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37. Stages in the Emergence of the CochinKodungallur CoastEvidence for the Interaction of Marine and Fluvial Processes
- Author
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Thomas Mathai and S B Nair
- Subjects
lcsh:Q ,lcsh:Science - Abstract
Stages in the Emergence of the CochinKodungallur CoastEvidence for the Interaction of Marine and Fluvial Processes
- Published
- 2015
38. Multifocal tuberculosis verrucosa cutis
- Author
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P K Kaviarasan, Ashok Thomas Mathai, P. V. S. Prasad, and Jiby Rajan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Cutaneous tuberculosis ,Tuberculosis ,business.industry ,cutaneous ,Cutis ,Case Report ,Dermatology ,lcsh:RL1-803 ,medicine.disease ,Extra pulmonary tuberculosis ,tuberculosis ,Male patient ,medicine ,lcsh:Dermatology ,business ,Multifocal - Abstract
Tuberculosis has been a well-known affliction of human kind, since antiquity. Cutaneous tuberculosis constitutes only a small proportion of extra pulmonary tuberculosis and multifocal involvement of cutaneous tuberculosis is an even rarer manifestation. We report one such case of multifocal tuberculosis verrucosa cutis in a 17-year old male patient in the absence of any primary tuberculous focus.
- Published
- 2011
39. Piezosurgery: A boon for modern periodontics
- Author
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Ealla, KrantiK. R, primary, Thomas, Mathai, additional, Akula, Uttam, additional, and Gajjada, Nirosha, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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40. Characterizing microclimate in urban malaria transmission settings: a case study from Chennai, India
- Author
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Krijn P. Paaijmans, Alex Eapen, Lauren J. Cator, Andrew F. Read, Matthew B. Thomas, Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Johnson A. Justin, Manu Thomas Mathai, and Shalu Thomas
- Subjects
Urban Population ,Range (biology) ,Plasmodium falciparum ,030231 tropical medicine ,Microclimate ,India ,Pilot Projects ,Biology ,Atmospheric sciences ,Models, Biological ,law.invention ,Weather station ,Extrinsic incubation period ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Anopheles ,Malaria, Vivax ,Animals ,Humans ,Malaria, Falciparum ,Anopheles stephensi ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Ecology ,Research ,Diurnal temperature variation ,Temperature ,biology.organism_classification ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Habitat ,Parasitology ,Plasmodium vivax ,Urban malaria - Abstract
Background Environmental temperature is an important driver of malaria transmission dynamics. Both the parasite and vector are sensitive to mean ambient temperatures and daily temperature variation. To understand transmission ecology, therefore, it is important to determine the range of microclimatic temperatures experienced by malaria vectors in the field. Methods A pilot study was conducted in the Indian city of Chennai to determine the temperature variation in urban microclimates and characterize the thermal ecology of the local transmission setting. Temperatures were measured in a range of probable indoor and outdoor resting habitats of Anopheles stephensi in two urban slum malaria sites. Mean temperatures and daily temperature fluctuations in local transmission sites were compared with standard temperature measures from the local weather station. The biological implications of the different temperatures were explored using temperature-dependent parasite development models to provide estimates of the extrinsic incubation period (EIP) of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum. Results Mean daily temperatures within the urban transmission sites were generally warmer than those recorded at the local weather station. The main reason was that night-time temperatures were higher (and hence diurnal temperature ranges smaller) in the urban settings. Mean temperatures and temperature variation also differed between specific resting sites within the transmission environments. Most differences were of the order of 1-3°C but were sufficient to lead to important variation in predicted EIPs and hence, variation in estimates of transmission intensity. Conclusions Standard estimates of environmental temperature derived from local weather stations do not necessarily provide realistic measures of temperatures within actual transmission environments. Even the small differences in mean temperatures or diurnal temperature ranges reported in this study can lead to large variations in key mosquito and/or parasite life history traits that determine transmission intensity. Greater effort should be directed at quantifying adult mosquito resting behaviour and determining the temperatures actually experienced by mosquitoes and parasites in local transmission environments. In the absence of such highly resolved data, the approach used in the current study provides a framework for improved thermal characterization of transmission settings.
- Published
- 2013
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41. Tuberculosis of and around the ankle
- Author
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Sumant Samuel, Thomas Mathai, Manika Alexander, Viju Daniel Varghese, Ravichand Ismavel, and P. R. J. V. C. Boopalan
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,Bursitis ,Biopsy ,Antitubercular Agents ,Arthritis ,India ,Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Young Adult ,Synovitis ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Orthopedic Procedures ,Retrocalcaneal bursitis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Tenosynovitis ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Septic arthritis ,Female ,Ankle ,business ,Ankle Joint ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Osteoarticular tuberculosis of the ankle joint is rare, and diagnostic delays are common with this condition. The aim of our report is to highlight the varied clinical and radiologic presentation of this entity. We present a retrospective review of 16 patients with tuberculosis in and around the ankle joint who were surgically treated during a 6-year period. The incidence of ankle joint involvement in extraspinal osteoarticular tuberculosis was 15.7% in our unit. The most common presentation in our series was chronic septic arthritis, followed by periarticular osseous lytic lesion. Tuberculous synovitis, tenosynovits, and retrocalcaneal bursitis were also seen. Osteopenia, the hallmark of osteoarticular tuberculosis, might not be seen in all forms of tuberculosis affecting this joint. Chemotherapy remains the mainstay of treatment. Adjuvant surgery is often required to establish the diagnosis and in the treatment of patients with deformity and widespread destruction of articular cartilage owing to delayed presentation.
- Published
- 2010
42. High frequency hydrodynamic coefficients of vertical cylinders
- Author
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Thomas Mathai and Michael Isaacson
- Subjects
Alternative methods ,Physics ,Structural stability ,Section (archaeology) ,Mechanics ,Vertical cylinder ,Wave effect ,General Environmental Science ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,Added mass - Abstract
Alternative methods of calculating high frequency added masses and damping coefficients of vertical cylinders of arbitrary section are described. Damping coefficients are calculated by a short-wave approximation relating to the local form of waves generated by the oscillating structure. As an alternative, they are also obtained from the exciting forces of the related scattering problem, with these forces obtained by a geometrical optics approximation. Added masses are obtained by discarding the propagating mode and using only the evanescent modes which are free of irregular frequencies. They are also obtained by an application of the Kramers–Kronig relations, which require the infinite frequency added masses and the damping coefficients at all frequencies. Numerical results obtained by the various methods are compared with corresponding analytical results for vertical circular and elliptic cylinders. The practical application of the proposed approach is indicated. Key words: added mass, cylinders, damping, hydrodynamics, ocean engineering, offshore structures, waves.
- Published
- 1992
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43. Single and multibeam echosounder surveys delineate Tsunami wave impacted depressions off Chellanum, Kerala
- Author
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Thomas Mathai, M. R. Asokakumar, Pradeep Kumar, M. Suresh Chandran, K. N. Rajarama, and Satish Kumar
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Shore ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Oceanography ,Tsunami wave ,Echo sounding ,Molecular beam epitaxial growth ,Feature (archaeology) ,Single beam ,Bathymetry ,Geology - Abstract
Detailed bathymetric surveys using the single beam echo-sounder (BATHY-1500) and Multi-beam echo-sounder (MBES-Seabat — 8111) along the nearshore sector off Chellanum coast of Kerala has brought out shore parallel depressions having depths of about 5 to 6m abruptly beyond the 4m level in the nearshore sector. The otherwise smooth and undulating shoreward gradient displays this abrupt anomalous depression as a recently developed feature. The Tsunami waves that lashed this part of the shore are seen to have caused extensive damage along the Chellanum coast. It is probable that the heavy impact of the tsunami wave in the nearshore could have scooped out the clayey sediments from the nearshore and caused these shore parallel depressions.
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- 2009
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44. Hydrodynamic coefficients of a vertical circular cylinder
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Thomas Mathai, Carol Mihelcic, and Michael Isaacson
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Geometry ,Mechanics ,Radiation ,Eigenfunction ,Cylinder (engine) ,law.invention ,Distribution (mathematics) ,law ,Submarine pipeline ,Seabed ,General Environmental Science ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,Mathematics ,Added mass - Abstract
The added mass and the damping coefficient of a large surface-piercing circular cylinder extending to the seabed and undergoing horizontal oscillations are described. A closed-form solution to the corresponding linear radiation problem is obtained by the use of eigenfunction expansions. Attention is given to the vertical distribution of these coefficients and to their high-frequency asymptotic behaviour. Comparisons are made with experimental measurements. The application to typical offshore structures is discussed. Key words: added mass, cylinders, damping, hydrodynamics, ocean engineering.
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- 1990
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45. Piezosurgery: A Boon for Modern Periodontics.
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Thomas, Mathai, Akula, Uttam, Ealla, Kranti K. R., and Gajjada, Nirosha
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PIEZOSURGERY ,PERIODONTICS ,MEDICAL innovations ,BIOCHEMICAL mechanism of action ,PIEZOELECTRIC devices - Abstract
Dentistry has undergone significant advancement and has seen several changing concepts over a decade. One such novel innovation is piezosurgery. Piezoelectric bone surgery or otherwise known as piezosurgery is a novel technique invented by Professor Vercellotti in 1988 to overcome the limitations of traditional instrumentation in oral bone surgery by modifying and improving conventional ultrasound technology. It is a promising, meticulous, and soft tissue sparing system for bone cutting based on low frequency ultrasonic microvibrations. The absence of macrovibration makes the instrument more manageable and allows greater intraoperative control with a significant increase in cutting safety in the more difficult anatomical cutting zone. The present review compares piezosurgery with the traditional tools and emphasizes on its mechanism of action, instruments, biologic effects, advantages, and limitations, as well as its various applications in the field of dentistry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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46. Dental Anxiety among Dental, Medical, and Nursing Students in India and Its Correlation with Their Field of Study.
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Thomas, Mathai, Kumar, Vinod, Sooraparaju, Sujatha Gopal, Mathew, Tom, Kumar, Anoop, and Ealla, Kranti Kiran Reddy
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DENTAL pathology ,DENTAL care ,FEAR of dentists ,ANESTHETICS ,DENTAL health education - Abstract
Background: Rejection of dental treatment could be attributed due to dental fear and anxiety in many patients. Health sciences students are educational resources for the general population. Their reaction to dental treatment is very important to know their dental behavior. This study was designed to evaluate dental anxiety levels among medical, dental, and nursing students and its correlation between faculties. Materials and Methods: A total of 500 undergraduate students from the faculties of medicine, nursing, and dentistry were recruited into the study. Dental anxiety among study group was measured using modified dental anxiety scale. Results: Around 425 complete questionnaires were returned, which accounts for a response rate of 82% (425/500). The mean anxiety scores were the following: Dental students, 28.6% (40/140); medical students, 35.4% (70/198), and nursing students, 46.0% (40/87). Women exhibited higher anxiety level but the difference was not statistically significant. Most of the participants were anxious about local anesthetic injection (P < 0.0001). Conclusion: Most of the medical and nursing students exhibited high dental anxiety. Inadequate knowledge about dental health education may result in a high level of dental anxiety among non-dental students. Further studies are required to identify the correlation of dental anxiety among health sciences students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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47. Studies on the effect of wave steepness on wave force coefficient for elliptical caissons
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Thomas Mathai and Vallam Sundar
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Diffraction ,Engineering ,Environmental Engineering ,LABORATORY RESULTS ,Wave propagation ,business.industry ,Semi-major axis ,WAVE STEEPNESS ,Ocean Engineering ,Regular wave ,Mechanics ,WATER WAVES - Measurements ,Laboratory results ,CAISSONS ,DATA PROCESSING - Data Reduction and Analysis ,Wave force ,Caisson ,DYNAMOMETERS ,Geotechnical engineering ,business ,ELLIPTICAL CAISSONS - Abstract
The effect of wave steepness on the wave force exerted on an elliptical caisson subjected to regular wave is presented in this paper. Laboratory results are compared with the modified linear diffraction theory proposed by Mogridge and Jamieson (1976). The caisson was tested for angles of orientations of 0°, 30°, 60° and 90° of its major axis with the direction of wave propagation.
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- 1986
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48. Community development and primary health care in developing countries with particular reference to India
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Palakkamanil, Thomas Mathai
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- 1985
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49. Does fluoride influence oviposition of Anopheles stephensi in stored water habitats in an urban setting?
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Alex Eapen, Aswin Asokan, Shalu Thomas, T. Maria Jusler Kalsingh, Sangamithra Ravishankaran, Neena Valecha, N. A. Johnson Amala Justin, and Manu Thomas Mathai
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0106 biological sciences ,Veterinary medicine ,Chemical Phenomena ,Oviposition ,030231 tropical medicine ,01 natural sciences ,Breeding habitats ,Fluorides ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anopheles ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Fluoride ,Anopheles stephensi ,Ecosystem ,Ecological niche ,Larva ,biology ,Ecology ,Research ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,fungi ,Water ,biology.organism_classification ,Total dissolved solids ,Infectious Diseases ,Habitat ,Physico-chemical factors ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Female ,Parasitology ,Water quality - Abstract
Background The physico-chemical characteristics of lentic aquatic habitats greatly influence mosquito species in selecting suitable oviposition sites; immature development, pupation and adult emergence, therefore are considerations for their preferred ecological niche. Correlating water quality parameters with mosquito breeding, as well as immature vector density, are useful for vector control operations in identifying and targeting potential breeding habitats. Methods A total of 40 known habitats of Anopheles stephensi, randomly selected based on a vector survey in parallel, were inspected for the physical and chemical nature of the aquatic environment. Water samples were collected four times during 2013, representing four seasons (i.e., ten habitats per season). The physico-chemical variables and mosquito breeding were statistically analysed to find their correlation with immature density of An. stephensi and also co-inhabitation with other mosquito species. Results Anopheles stephensi prefer water with low nitrite content and high phosphate content. Parameters such as total dissolved solids, electrical conductivity, total hardness, chloride, fluoride and sulfate had a positive correlation in habitats with any mosquito species breeding (p
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50. International Energy Agency Ocean Energy Systems Task 10 Wave Energy Converter Modeling Verification and Validation
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Wendt, Fabian F., Yi-Hsiang Yu, Kim Nielsen, Kelley Ruehl, Tim Bunnik, Imanol Touzon, Bo Woo Nam, Jeong Seok Kim, Kyong-Hwan Kim, Carl Erik Janson, Ken-Robert Jakobsen, Sarah Crowley, Luis Vega, Krishnakumar Rajagopalan, Thomas Mathai, Deborah Greaves, Edward Ransley, Paul Lamont-Kane, Wanan Sheng, Ronan Costello, Ben Kennedy, Sarah Thomas, Pilar Heras, Bingham, Harry B., Adi Kurniawan, Morten Bech Kramer, David Ogden, Samuel Girardin, Aurelien Babarit, Pierre-Yves Wuillaume, Dean Steinke, André Roy, Scott Beatty, Paul Schofield, Johan Jansson, and Johan Hoffman
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OES ,CFD application ,BEM ,Wave energy ,Validation ,Verification ,IEA ,Task 10 ,Heaving sphere ,International cooperation ,Code comparison ,Wave power ,Numerical model - Abstract
This is the first joint reference paper for the Ocean Energy Systems (OES) Task 10 Wave Energy Converter modeling verification and validation group. The group is established under the OES Energy Technology Network program under the International Energy Agency. OES was founded in 2001 and Task 10 was proposed by Bob Thresher (National Renewable Energy Laboratory) in 2015 and approved by the OES Executive Committee EXCO in 2016. The kickoff workshop took place in September 2016, wherein the initial baseline task was defined. Experience from similar offshore wind validation/verification projects (OC3-OC5 conducted within the International Energy Agency Wind Task 30) [1], [2] showed that a simple test case would help the initial cooperation to present results in a comparable way. A heaving sphere was chosen as the first test case. The team of project participants simulated different numerical experiments, such as heave decay tests and regular and irregular wave cases. The simulation results are presented and discussed in this paper.
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