Publications by authors named "B Nanda Kishore"

Article Synopsis
  • The obesity paradox refers to the phenomenon where individuals with obesity may have better survival rates during acute cardiovascular events, challenging traditional views of obesity's health risks.
  • The review discusses definitions, evidence for and against the obesity paradox, and emphasizes the need for varied measures of body mass to assess health risks effectively.
  • It also explores the concept of metabolically healthy obesity, the impact of cardio-respiratory fitness on health outcomes, and how genetic and cultural factors may influence obesity and related health risks.
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Deeper responses are associated with improved survival in patients being treated for myeloma. However, the sensitivity of the current blood-based assays is limited. Historical studies suggested that normalisation of the serum free light chain (FLC) ratio in patients who were negative by immunofixation electrophoresis (IFE) was associated with improved outcomes.

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Background: In multiple myeloma (MM), improving our understanding of routine clinical practice and the effectiveness of agents outside of clinical trials is important. TOURMALINE-MM1 data resulted in approval of ixazomib for MM patients who have received ≥ 1 prior therapy.

Patients And Methods: UVEA-IXA comprised a retrospective chart review in the early access program, and a prospective 1-year follow-up period.

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Conventional staging paradigm with clinical examination or imaging invariably leads to underestimation of occult metastatic neck disease in oral cavity carcinoma. The advantage of F-FDG PET/CT is in its ability to identify lymph nodes without morphological changes yet harboring occult metastases. We present findings of our study to evaluate diagnostic accuracy of F-FDG PET/CT, in detecting occult cervical lymph node metastasis in carcinoma oral cavity.

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Nutrient inadequacies among picky-eaters have adverse effects on growth and development. Oral nutritional supplements (ONS) along with dietary counseling (DC), rather than DC alone as reported in our earlier publication, promoted growth among picky-eating Indian children aged from >24 m to ≤48 m with weight-for-height percentiles lying between the 5th and 25th (based on WHO Growth Standards) over 90 days. This paper presents the contribution of ONS to nutrient adequacy, dietary diversity, and food consumption patterns in children (N = 321).

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