The emergence of adrenergic β2-receptor (ADRB2) blockers has revolutionized glaucoma treatment, while the discovery of prostaglandin analogs has further expanded therapeutic options. Organic anion transporting polypeptide 2A1 (OATP2A1/SLCO2A1) facilitates the corneal transport of topical prostaglandins into anterior segment of eye. Our study aims to elucidate the prevalence of genetic polymorphisms in the ADRB2 and OATP2A1 to address variations in therapeutic responses among glaucoma patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding the metabolic dysfunctions and underlying complex pathological mechanisms of neurodegeneration in glaucoma could help discover disease pathways, identify novel biomarkers, and rationalize newer therapeutics. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the local metabolomic alterations in the aqueous humor and plasma of primary glaucomatous patients. This study cohort comprised primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), primary angle-closure glaucoma (PACG), and cataract control groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAyurveda, the indigenous medical system of India, has chemosensory property () as one of its major pharmacological metric. Medicinal plants have been classified in Ayurveda under six /tastes-sweet, sour, saline, pungent, bitter and astringent. This study has explored for the first time, the use of Electronic tongue for studies of -based classification of medicinal plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Neurotransmitters (NTs) are the key mediators of essential ocular functions, such as processing the visual functions of the retina, maintaining homeostasis of aqueous humor, and regulating ocular blood flow. This study aims to determine variations in the levels of L-glutamate and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), histaminergic, adrenergic, cholinergic, and serotonergic NTs in patients with primary glaucoma versus patients with cataract.
Methods: This case-control study involved three age-matched groups of patients with primary open angle glaucoma (POAG, n = 14), primary angle closure glaucoma (PACG, n = 21), and cataract (control, n = 19).
Cancer therapies have undergone a tremendous progress over the past decade. Precision medicine provides a more tailored approach, making the combination of existing therapies more precise. Different types of cancers are characterized by unique biomarkers that are targeted using various genomic approaches by clinicians and companies worldwide to achieve efficient treatment with minimal side effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although Electronic tongue is used in pharmaceutical, food and beverage industries for objective evaluation of taste, its use in medicinal plants from an ayurvedic perspective is novel. Control experiments are therefore necessary to standardise and optimise parameters.
Objective: The aim is to optimise the use of solvent and standardise sample concentration for study of plants from an ayurvedic standpoint of rasa.
J Ayurveda Integr Med
January 2021
There is growing interest in understanding how ayurveda, the indigenous medical system of India, uses plants for therapeutic purpose. The aim of this two parts article is to explore how the analytical technique of Electronic tongue (E-tongue) can be used for studying rasa, one of the major ayurvedic parameter in the study of medicinal and nutritional plants. Although E-tongue is widely used in pharmaceutical, food and beverage industries for objective evaluation of taste, its use in plants from an ayurvedic perspective is novel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Aims: Many studies have conclusively proven that meditative techniques derived from the Indian systems of philosophy, meditation and ritual classified as "Tantra" can bring about sustained changes in the structure and function of the nervous system of practitioners. The aim of this study is to provide neuroscientists a framework through which to interpret Tantra, and thereby provide a foundation upon which future interdisciplinary study can be built.
Methods: We juxtapose Tantric concepts such as the subtle body, nadis and mantras with relevant neuroscientific findings.
Background: Information from Ayurveda meeting the analytical challenges of modern technology is an area of immense relevance. Apart from the cerebral task of bringing together two different viewpoints, the question at the pragmatic level remains 'who benefits whom'.
Objective: The aim is to highlight the challenges in integration of information (Ayurvedic) and technology using test examples of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) metabolomics and anti-HIV-1 potential of select Ayurvedic medicinal plants.
J Ayurveda Integr Med
November 2016
Background: The use of medicinal plants in Ayurveda is based on rasa, generally taken to represent taste as a sensory perception. This chemosensory parameter plays an important role in Ayurvedic pharmacology.
Objective: The aim is to explore the use of structuro-functional information deduced from analytical techniques for the rasa-based classification of medicinal plants in Ayurveda.
Ayurveda, the indigenous medical system of India, has integrated the concept of interconnectedness into its understanding of health and disease. It considers the human body as an indivisible whole with a network of interrelated functions, mind and consciousness, wherein a disturbance in one part will have repercussions in other parts as well. The key to health is for these factors to maintain stability since disease is seen as a perturbation in this network.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To evaluate the role of MR spectroscopy (MRS) as a noninvasive tool for characterization of intraventricular brain tumors.
Materials And Methods: Twenty-three intraventricular tumors, all histologically classified (11 central neurocytomas [CNC], 5 meningiomas [Men], other intraventricular tumors [OIV], including 2 anaplastic gliomas [WHO III], 1 tumor each of rhabdoid tumor, glioneuronal hamartoma, GBM, hemangiopericytoma, and subependymoma II), were studied by MRS before surgery using a point-resolved spectroscopic sequence (PRESS).
Results: Statistically significant differences (P < 0.
This study reports in vivo MRS findings in 11 patients with histologically diagnosed central neurocytomas, which are rare intraventricular tumors of neuronal origin. Single-voxel (1)H MRS was carried out prior to surgery using a point-resolved spectroscopy sequence with TR=6 s, TE=135 ms and 128 scans. In vitro high-resolution (1)H spectroscopy was also carried out on two surgically excised samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloids Surf B Biointerfaces
January 2011
Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) have been receiving great attention lately in biomedical applications, such as in magnetic resonance imaging and drug delivery. However, their systemic administration still remains a challenge due to their hydrophobic nature with instances of aggregation leading to fast reticuloendothelial system (RES) uptake. In this study, magnetic nanocomposites with thermosensitive polymer have been investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRelaxation time measurements were carried out during the preacute stage of lesion progression in an animal model of demyelination created in the internal capsule (ic) area of the rat brain using lysophosphatidyl choline (LPC). T1 and T2 were determined both before and after 36 h of lesion creation. Histology carried out on the rats after MR measurements showed focal demyelinating lesion and surrounding edema with prominent infiltration of inflammatory cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the last three decades a range of non-invasive biophysical techniques have been developed, of which Magnetic Resonance (MR) has proved to be the most versatile. Its non-invasive and safe nature has made it the most important diagnostic and research tool in clinical medicine. MR Spectroscopy (MRS) is the only technique in clinical medicine that provides non-invasive access to living chemistry in situ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol India
December 2002
The chemical shift difference between the water resonance and the methyl resonance of N-acetylaspartate was used to determine the in vivo temperature in 43 patients with histologically proven brain tumors. Temperatures were also estimated from the contralateral side in 15 of these patients. There was a significant difference (p < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Magn Reson Imaging
February 2003
This study reports in vivo and in vitro magnetic resonance spectroscopic findings in two cases of central neurocytomas (CNC) confirmed by immunohistochemistry. Volume localized in vivo proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was carried out before surgery using a point resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) sequence with a repetition time of six seconds and an echo time of 135 msec. Normal spectrum was obtained from gray matter from a volunteer for comparison.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemical asymmetries in normal human brain were studied using the non-invasive technique of volume localized proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). The technique of STEAM was used to acquire water-suppressed proton spectra from 8 ml voxels placed in bilaterally symmetrical positions in the two hemispheres of the brain. One hundred and sixty eight right-handed male volunteers were studied for six different regions in the brain (n=28, for each region).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To differentiate the surrounding edema from the focal demyelinating lesion during the early phase of the lesion using an apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), and to monitor the changes in ADCs during the complete progression of a lysophosphatidyl choline (LPC)-induced experimental demyelinating lesion, an animal model of multiple sclerosis (MS).
Material And Methods: Eighteen rats divided into two groups-demyelinating lesion (group I, N = 12) and vehicle group (saline injected; group II, N = 6)-were studied. A 0.
Metabolite changes in rat brain internal capsule (ic) area were monitored using volume localized in vivo proton MR spectroscopy (MRS) in a lysophosphatidyl choline (LPC)-induced experimental demyelinating lesion model of multiple sclerosis (MS), during the early phase (pre-acute) as well as during the complete pathological cycle of de- and re-myelination processes. The N-acetyl aspartate (NAA) peak showed reduction during the early phase of the lesion progression (demyelination) until day 10 and increased thereafter during remyelination. However, choline (Cho) and lipid resonances showed increased signal intensity during the early phase and decreased during remyelination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVolume localized proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy was carried out in both the left and right basal ganglia of three patients with clinically proven Wilson's Disease. While the untreated patient died 15 days after the spectroscopy study, the other 2 patients have been under treatment and have shown clinical improvement. The spectral features of the untreated patient were very different from those of the other two patients who were under treatment and responding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Imaging
January 2001
Single loop surface coil, often used in MR studies, was evaluated for its performance as an inductive hyperthermic applicator. The heat deposition pattern produced by the surface coil at 84 MHz and 34 MHz was mapped in muscle-mimicking agar phantoms. Temperatures were measured simultaneously at 64 points using multiple-junction thermocouples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Imaging
January 2001
Combining hyperthermia, an experimental/adjuvant therapeutic modality for cancer, with the non-invasive metabolic studies using Magnetic Resonance (MR) is an interesting area of research. This two parts article discusses the development and testing of a conventional RF hyperthermia applicator for MR studies and vice versa. In this first part, an inductive type applicator known as 'Magnetrode' in RF hyperthermia has been used both as an MR volume resonator and a surface coil.
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