Publications by authors named "Sarthak Sengupta"

Unlabelled: Nowadays social media usage has increased drastically among the stakeholders of higher educational institutions. The COVID-19 pandemic has suddenly increased the surge of social media users due to the forced implementation of online pedagogy and travel restrictions. The research study presented in this paper attempted to analyze social media usage in higher education.

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Nutritional anaemia is the most common type and cause of anaemia. Tea garden workers constitute approximately 1/5th of population in the state of Assam. Reports indicate higher prevalence of undernutrition in this population.

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Individual cancer susceptibility is the result of several host factors, including differences in lifestyle habits and genetic susceptibility. There is a correlation between CYP1A1 polymorphism (MspI) and oral cancer susceptibility. Individuals carrying the deletions of GSTM1 and GSTT1 are at high risk of developing oral cancers.

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Background: The north-eastern states of India in general and the state of Assam in particular appear to be areas with a very high incidence of HbE, with the highest frequency of the allele observed among the Kachari population.

Aim: In the present study a Tibeto-Burmese speaking population of Assam, India has been studied with regard to haemoglobin E (HbE) and to examine the role of different HbE genotypes on fertility.

Subjects And Methods: Detailed reproductive histories and socio-economic data were collected from 159 unrelated Mishing (a Tibeto-Burmese population) couples initially.

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Five hundred and thirteen unrelated subjects belonging to various tribes of West Bengal, Arunachal Pradesh and Assam in Eastern India, were screened for the presence of alpha-thalassemia (thal) gene deletion(s) as a possible cause of unexplained anemia (Hb < 11 g/dL and/or MCH <28 pg, MCV < 78 fL). As reported earlier, beta-globin gene mutant alleles were found with a frequency of up to 20% in some tribes. In the present study, alpha-globin gene deletion alleles were found in 18% of subjects from West Bengal, 3.

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