5 results match your criteria: "S.K. Soni Hospital[Affiliation]"

Context: Currently, there is limited data on the prevention of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) in Indian patients.

Aims: This post hoc study assessed the efficacy and safety of fosaprepitant compared with aprepitant for prevention of CINV in the Indian population. A subgroup analysis was performed from data collected in a phase 3 study of intravenous (IV) fosaprepitant or oral aprepitant, plus the 5-HT 3 antagonist ondansetron and the corticosteroid dexamethasone, in cisplatin-naοve patients with solid malignancies.

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Changing definitions of metabolic syndrome.

Indian J Endocrinol Metab

January 2012

Department of Diabetology, S K Soni Hospital and D Clinic, Jaipur, India.

The first description of patients with clustering of various metabolic abnormalities was as early as 1923 but it was more than five decades later, in 1988, that Reaven coined the term 'syndrome X' for this entity. The last two decades have brought forth a number of definitions and criteria to identify this condition. Various studies have demonstrated disparities in these definitions and a few researchers have questioned the utility of these criteria and even the existence of such a syndrome.

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Index of central obesity is better than waist circumference in defining metabolic syndrome.

Metab Syndr Relat Disord

December 2009

Department of Diabetology and Metabolic Medicine, S.K. Soni Hospital, Jaipur, India.

Objective: The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) global definition of metabolic syndrome suggests using race- and gender-specific waist circumference (WC) cutoffs. Previously, we have hypothesized that need for gender- and race-specific cutoffs could be obviated by supplanting WC with index of central obesity (ICO). The aim of this study was to test the utility of ICO in defining metabolic syndrome.

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Skeletal fluorosis causing high cervical myelopathy.

J Clin Neurosci

June 2009

Department of Neurology, S.K. Soni Hospital, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India.

Skeletal fluorosis is endemic in some parts of the world and is the result of life-long ingestion of high amounts of fluoride in drinking water. Its clinical presentation is characterized mostly by bone and dental changes with later ossification of many ligaments and interosseous membranes. We present a rare case of high cervical myelopathy caused by ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament and ligamentum flavum in a patient from an area endemic for skeletal fluorosis.

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