Publications by authors named "N B Sarkari"

Purpose: Do-not-attempt-resuscitation (DNAR) orders are common in severe sepsis, but the impact on clinical care is not known. Our primary objective was to determine the impact of early DNAR orders on in-hospital mortality and performance of key interventional procedures among severe sepsis hospitalizations. Our secondary objective was to further investigate what patient characteristics within the sepsis DNAR population affected outcomes.

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Japanese encephalitis, the commonest Arbovirus encephalitis, has been endemic in many parts of Asia, the Pacific Islands, and India; also, there have been many epidemics. Most of the post JE cases have been associated with neurological and neuropsychiatric deficits but have not been properly classified and followed. Practically all the previous studies were in children or young adults.

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Japanese encephalitis (JE) is numerically the most important global cause of encephalitis and so far confirmed to have caused major epidemics in India. Most of the reported studies have been in children. This largest study involving only adults, belonging to four epidemics, is being reported from Gorakhpur.

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Detailed echocardiographic analysis was performed in 10 children with first episode of acute rheumatic fever who presented with acute rheumatic polyarthritis or rheumatic chorea and had no clinically detectable evidence of active carditis. Significant changes were observed in the form of mitral valve prolapse with regurgitation in 3, aortic valve prolapse with regurgitation in 1 and mitral valve billowing without regurgitation in 1 patient each. A significant (p < 0.

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Two hundred consecutive patients of non-traumatic coma, were investigated to establish its aetiology. Neurologic profile of these patients included assessment of Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score and evaluation of brainstem reflexes. 102 patients died and only 54 patients could make good recovery.

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