Publications by authors named "GS Kumar"

This investigation examined the nature and frequency of errors in clinical judgment that were displayed by primary health care medical officers before and after short-term training in mental health care. Thirty-nine medical officers who underwent inservice training for 2 weeks were evaluated using standardized case vignettes. Before the training, doctors displayed a sizable percentage of major and minor errors, which dropped significantly following training.

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A case of persistent buccopharyngeal membrane associated with cleft palate is reported. Persistence of the buccopharyngeal membrane results in partial fusion of the jaws and inability in opening and should be labeled as partial syngnathia. An association of this condition with cleft palate occurs as a part of the aglossia-adactylia and the popliteal pterygium syndromes.

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The interaction of berberine chloride with natural and synthetic DNAs of differing base composition and sequences was followed by various spectroscopic and viscometric studies. The binding of berberine chloride was characterized by hypochromism and bathochromism in the absorption bands, enhancement of fluorescence intensity, stabilization against thermal denaturation, perturbations in the circular dichroic spectrum, increase in the contour length of sonicated rod-like DNA and induction of unwinding-rewinding process of covalently closed superhelical DNA, depending on the base composition and sequences of base pairs. Binding parameters determined from absorbance and fluorescence titration by Scatchard analysis, according to an excluded-site model, indicated a very high specificity of berberine to AT-rich DNAs and alternate AT polymer.

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We previously observed, using a relatively primitive assay, that small oral doses (on the order of 1 microgram = 1 nmol = 1000 pmol per rat) of vasopressin can produce antidiuresis in hydrated rats, and that the oral activity was enhanced by simultaneous administration of an inhibitor of intestinal proteolysis. A more sensitive semi-automated computer-linked apparatus was used to conveniently and quickly compare the antidiuretic activities of the two natural and one synthetic vasopressin peptides by several routes of administration. (The approximate dose in pmol that resulted in a 50% decrease in urine flow is indicated in square brackets.

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Malarial antibodies in 80 patients were measured using the diffusion-in-gel enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (DIG-ELISA), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and the indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) test. Good correlations were obtained between all three tests in terms of sensitivity and reliability. DIG-ELISA has the advantage of being a rapid diagnostic tool for the detection of malarial antibodies.

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The oral administration of peptide drugs is well known to be precluded by their digestion in the stomach and small intestine. As a new approach to oral delivery, peptide drugs were coated with polymers cross-linked with azoaromatic groups to form an impervious film to protect orally administered drugs from digestion in the stomach and small intestine. When the azopolymer-coated drug reached the large intestine, the indigenous microflora reduced the azo bonds, broke the cross-links, and degraded the polymer film, thereby releasing the drug into the lumen of the colon for local action or for absorption.

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