Publications by authors named "Palakurthy P"

Purpose: Adverse effects are noticeable immediately after vaccination, especially when vaccinated to healthy people at the time of vaccination. The vaccine may cause adverse events which are very rare but adverse event following immunization surveillance becomes correspondingly more important in a less studied population like India. Hence, there is a need for carrying out a study pertaining to vaccine safety in the pediatric population of age 0-12 years and assessing the events occurring post-vaccination.

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Introduction: Oral cancer is one of the six most common cancers in the world, and globally more than 50% of head and neck cancers occur in Asia, remarkably in India. Overall, 200,000 cases of head and neck cancers occur each year in India, among which 80,000 are oral cancers. Epidemiological and clinical studies suggest a causative role of tobacco use in the evolution of oral potentially malignant and malignant disorders.

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Background: Xylene is a flammable liquid with characteristic petroleum or aromatic odours, it is miscible with most of the organic solvents and paraffin wax. Xylene clears tissues rapidly and renders transparency, facilitating clearing endpoint determination, this made it to be used as a clearing agent in routine histopathological techniques. Even though it is a good clearing agent, it causes damage to the tissues by its hardening effect particularly those fixed in non-protein coagulant fixatives.

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Cysticercosis, a helminthic disease commonly seen in India, Latin America, Eastern Europe and Southern Africa, results from extraintestinal encystation of the larval form of Taenia solium. It is a condition in which man acts as intermediate host instead of definitive host. The most frequent sites of cysticercosis are subcutaneous layers, brain, muscles, heart, liver, lungs, and peritoneum.

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A 3-week-old neonate with supraventricular tachycardia unresponsive to traditional therapy was treated successfully with amiodarone. An electrophysiologic study suggested the presence of a concealed left-sided accessory atrioventricular pathway. Because of its significant side effects, amiodarone should be used only as a last resort in the treatment of neonatal supraventricular tachycardia.

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Ninety patients (13 patients with supraventricular tachycardia and 72 patients with ventricular tachycardia) underwent electrophysiological study. Six out of 18 patients with supraventricular tachycardia (33%) and one out of 72 patients with ventricular tachycardia (1.4%) were considered suitable candidates for the scanning pacemaker.

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Myotonic dystrophy is frequently associated with functional and anatomic derangements in the myocardium. Ten myotonic dystrophy patients (seven men and three women, ages ranging from 35 to 58 years) were evaluated with a 12-lead ECG, 24-hour Holter monitor recording, invasive electrophysiologic studies, and echocardiographic examination. Nine patients displayed abnormalities in the conduction system.

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One hundred two patients with recurrent, drug-refractory tachyarrhythmias were treated with amiodarone for nine +/- eight months (mean +/- SD) (range, one to 50 months). Forty-five patients exhibited some form of neurotoxic reaction that was severe enough in nine patients to require discontinuation of treatment or reduction in dosage of the drug. The most frequent neurotoxic findings were tremor (44 patients), peripheral neuropathy (ten patients), and ataxia (seven patients).

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Cibenzoline, a new class I antiarrhythmic drug, was compared with quinidine in an open crossover study of 20 patients with frequent (greater than 30/hr) premature ventricular depolarizations (PVDs). Eight patients treated with cibenzoline experienced more than 75% reduction in PVD frequency. Cibenzoline completely suppressed ventricular couplets in eight of 17 patients and inhibited ventricular tachycardia (VT) in four of 13 patients.

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Severe bilateral blepharospasm with left hemiplegia occurred in a 50-year-old woman, who developed cardiac arrest following ventricular aneurysmectomy. The blepharospasm was present constantly, even during sleep, and increased during attempts at voluntary eye opening. CT scan revealed multiple hypodense areas involving basal ganglia bilaterally and the right perisylvian area.

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Fifty normal male and female athletes, or athletically active subjects, were evaluated, and a search for low-amplitude late potentials in the terminal part of ventricular activation was performed. Recordings from 3 normal men met the definition of abnormal late potentials, and were indistinguishable by present analytic techniques from those encountered in patients who have ventricular tachycardia (VT) after myocardial infarction (MI). Of 24 patients studied, 11 had VT, but only 2 had had an MI, which occurred in the remote past.

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Utilizing several different approaches to noise reduction, satisfactory beat by beat His bundle activity was recorded from the chest surface in 41 (80%) of 52 normal subjects. Surface atrial to His intervals (PAH) and His to ventricular intervals (HV) were measured in this group and compared with subintervals of the PR segment recorded endocardially from 47 persons with normal electrophysiologic findings. A recent modification in the selection algorithm allows on-line identification of the four of five possible recording sites for utilization in a spatial summation.

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