Publications by authors named "S Balkaran"

As cancers progress, they become increasingly aggressive-metastatic tumours are less responsive to first-line therapies than primary tumours, they acquire resistance to successive therapies and eventually cause death. Mutations are largely conserved between primary and metastatic tumours from the same patients, suggesting that non-genetic phenotypic plasticity has a major role in cancer progression and therapy resistance. However, we lack an understanding of metastatic cell states and the mechanisms by which they transition.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate additional management strategies alongside urotherapy for improving bowel and bladder dysfunction in children.
  • A systematic review of 18 studies involving 1,228 children found that these secondary strategies (like home education, biofeedback, and physical therapy) led to better outcomes compared to conventional urotherapy alone.
  • The findings suggest that incorporating secondary management strategies can reduce urinary incontinence, lower infection rates, and improve urinary flow metrics in affected children, despite some variability in reporting across studies.
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Metastasis is the principal cause of cancer death, yet we lack an understanding of metastatic cell states, their relationship to primary tumor states, and the mechanisms by which they transition. In a cohort of biospecimen trios from same-patient normal colon, primary and metastatic colorectal cancer, we show that while primary tumors largely adopt LGR5 intestinal stem-like states, metastases display progressive plasticity. Loss of intestinal cell states is accompanied by reprogramming into a highly conserved fetal progenitor state, followed by non-canonical differentiation into divergent squamous and neuroendocrine-like states, which is exacerbated by chemotherapy and associated with poor patient survival.

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Kawasaki-like multisystem inflammatory syndrome related to SARS-CoV-2 infection is a well-described condition in children and adolescents (MIS-C) and now also in adults (MIS-A). We report a case of MIS-A in a previously well woman in her mid-30s who presented with vasopressor-dependent shock 2 weeks after initial recovery from suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection, accompanied by fever, vomiting, diarrhoea, weakness, arthralgia, rash, cough and headache. Examination was notable for fever, tachycardia, hypotension, cervical lymphadenopathy, mucocutaneous involvement, neck stiffness, pansystolic murmur and bilateral crepitations.

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Background: Psychological distress and inappropriate or excessive weight gain are common in pregnancy and are associated with adverse maternal and offspring outcomes. Psychological well-being and weight status of women during pregnancy might be interrelated. We aimed to examine whether psychological distress during pregnancy is associated with gestational weight gain.

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