Publications by authors named "G Podder"

Article Synopsis
  • Post-stroke cognitive impairment (PSCI) affects about 30% of stroke survivors, with the BDNF gene being a significant factor, influenced by circadian rhythms.
  • The study investigates genetic variants in circadian clock genes (CLOCK, CRY2) and BDNF, analyzing their associations with PSCI among 119 post-stroke survivors and 292 controls from East India.
  • Results show that variants in CLOCK and BDNF are linked to cognitive decline, with lower gene expression levels in PSCI patients, suggesting these genetic factors and their dysregulation contribute to cognitive impairments after a stroke.
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Introduction: RNF213 mutations have been reported mostly in moyamoya disease (MMD) with varying frequencies across different ethnicities. However, its prevalence in non-MMD adult-onset ischemic stroke is still not well explored.

Aims And Objectives: This present study thus aims to screen the most common RNF213 variant (Arg4810Lys, among East Asians) in the Eastern Indian non-MMD ischemic stroke patients and correlate it with long-term progression and prognosis of the patients.

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Drinking raw date palm sap is the primary route of Nipah virus (NiV) transmission from bats to people in Bangladesh; subsequent person-to-person transmission is common. During December 2010 to March 2011, we investigated NiV epidemiology by interviewing cases using structured questionnaires, in-depth interviews, and group discussions to collect clinical and exposure histories. We conducted a case-control study to identify risk factors for transmission.

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This paper explores the utility of cluster- and case-based surveillance established in government hospitals in Bangladesh to detect Nipah virus, a stage III zoonotic pathogen. Physicians listed meningo-encephalitis cases in the 10 surveillance hospitals and identified a cluster when ⩾2 cases who lived within 30 min walking distance of one another developed symptoms within 3 weeks of each other. Physicians collected blood samples from the clustered cases.

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Active Nipah virus encephalitis surveillance identified an encephalitis cluster and sporadic cases in Faridpur, Bangladesh, in January 2010. We identified 16 case-patients; 14 of these patients died. For 1 case-patient, the only known exposure was hugging a deceased patient with a probable case, while another case-patient's exposure involved preparing the same corpse for burial by removing oral secretions and anogenital excreta with a cloth and bare hands.

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