Publications by authors named "Pingle A"

Article Synopsis
  • Tafenoquine, a single 300 mg dose combined with a 3-day chloroquine treatment, is approved for curing Plasmodium vivax malaria in patients 16 and older, offering a more convenient alternative to the traditional multi-day regimens with primaquine.
  • * The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends longer primaquine treatments which can lead to poor adherence, whereas tafenoquine's single-dose approach enhances patient compliance.
  • * Safety studies indicate that tafenoquine has a similar safety profile to primaquine, but both can cause serious complications in individuals with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, so G6PD testing is essential before treatment.*
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A single 300 mg dose of tafenoquine, in combination with chloroquine, is currently approved in several countries for the radical cure (prevention of relapse) of malaria in patients aged ≥16 years. Recently, however, Watson et al. suggested that the approved dose of tafenoquine is insufficient for radical cure, and that a higher 450 mg dose could reduce P.

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Opioids are an indispensable part of perioperative pain management of cancer surgeries. Opioids do have some side effects and abuse potential, and some laboratory data suggest a possible association of cancer recurrence with perioperative opioid use. Opioid-free anesthesia and opioid-sparing anesthesia are emerging new concepts worldwide to safeguard patients from adverse effects of opioids and potential abuse.

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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has gripped the world and is evolving day by day with deaths every hour. Being immunocompromised, cancer patients are more susceptible to contract the infection. Onco-surgeries on such immunocompromised patients have an increased risk of infection of COVID-19 to patients and health care workers.

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Parenteral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are useful agents in the treatment of postoperative pain and other acute traumatic painful conditions such as fractures. Clinical trials with lornoxicam, an oxicam derivative, document its efficacy as a potent analgesic with excellent anti-inflammatory properties in painful and or/inflammatory conditions including postoperative pain and arthritic conditions. However, there is no documentation of the efficacy and tolerability of intravenous lornoxicam in Indian patients with acute painful conditions such painful traumatic conditions requiring hospitalisation and parenteral analgesics.

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A 43-year-old man was admitted to the emergency department after a cardiac arrest of unknown etiology. The patient's medical history was unremarkable except for surgery to remove a mediastinal lipoma two years earlier. In the intensive care unit, he was observed to have a mass bulging from the left chest wall.

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The carrier rate for hepatitis B virus (HBV) varies from 1% to 2% to 10% in Asian-Pacific countries. A survey involving 12 transplant centers from 11 countries in this region showed that 1% to 25% of kidney transplant recipients were infected with HBV, and up to 60% of these subjects showed abnormal liver biochemistry. While nearly all centers tested anti-HBs in potential kidney transplant recipients, HBV vaccination of nonimmune subjects was routine in only 66.

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Recombinant human erythropoietin has proved to be effective to treat anemia of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy and safety profile of Epotin, a rHuEPO produced in the Middle East. One hundred thirty patients with Hct View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is little data on the spectrum of renal diseases in the United Arab Emirates. A renal diseases registry has been set up in an attempt to address this issue nationwide, and we report here the first outcome of this endeavor, a retrospective histopathologic analysis of 490 native kidney biopsies performed on adult patients presenting to four hospitals in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi from 1978 to June 1996. The most common indication for a biopsy was the nephrotic syndrome (54.

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Although continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) is now an established form of treatment for patients with end-stage renal failure (ESRF), it is not being used on a large scale in developing countries (DC). One of the limiting factors in this regard is peritonitis which is the most common complication of CAPD. Data on 70 patients on CAPD in our center were analyzed to study the impact of peritonitis on long-term outcome of this treatment.

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To evaluate the incidence of positivity of anti-hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) antibodies in the hemodialysis (HD) patients, and the impact of isolation of the anti-HCV positive patients, we studied 262 HD patients in our unit between January 1991 and December 1993. There were 64 patients with anti-HCV positivity. Forty nine of them were males, and 15 were females, with mean ages of 41.

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Between June, 1984, and May, 1988, 130 patients from three renal units in the United Arab Emirates and Oman went of their own accord to Bombay, where they bought, through brokers, kidneys from living unrelated Indian donors for US$2600-3300. 131 transplants were done, and the 122 patients who survived the perioperative period returned to their original renal units for follow-up. Altogether there were 25 deaths (16 before the end of 3 months, 4 in the next 3 months, and 4 more by the end of the first year), which gave a patient survival rate of 81.

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