91 results on '"Sharma, Anjana"'
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2. Efficacy of 'Harchur raksi', a traditional fermented beverage of high altitude Darjeeling hills as an anti-inflammatory and antiviral remedy.
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Bhattacharjee, Soumita, Sharma, Anjana, Lala, Mousikha, Gupta, Prasant, Ghosh, Chandra, and Sen, Arnab
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- 2024
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3. Biocidal polymer derived near white light‐emitting polymeric carbon particles for antibacterial and bioimaging applications.
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Sartaliya, Shaifali, Sharma, Raina, Sharma, Anjana, Chopra, Vianni, Neethu, K. M., Solanki, Arun Kumar, Ghosh, Deepa, and Jayamurugan, Govindasamy
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BACTERIAL cell walls ,POLYMERS ,BIOMEDICAL materials ,DENTAL adhesives ,BACTERIAL cells ,PHOSPHORS ,DRUG resistance in bacteria - Abstract
A growing antimicrobial crisis has increased demand for antimicrobial materials. It has become increasingly popular to convert polymeric macromolecules into polymeric carbon particles (PCP) in order to achieve highly biocompatible materials with unique properties as a result of the ability to synthesize nanomaterials of the right size and add value to existing stable polymers. This work presents the tuning of PCP for antibacterial application by combining a biocidal polymer with one‐pot solvothermal synthesis. PCP displayed broad‐spectrum antibacterial activity via various mechanisms, including inhibition of bacterial cell walls, ROS generation, and antibiotic resistance. Furthermore, these biocidal PCP were observed to show excitation‐independent near‐white light emission which on the other hand is generally possible due to mixed sizes, doping, and surface effects. As opposed to the parent biocidal polymer, PCP added ROS‐mediated bactericidal activity, increased cytocompatibility, and nanofibers with anti‐adhesive effects and potential of imaging bacterial cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Nanoparticles toxicity: an overview of its mechanism and plausible mitigation strategies.
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Sharma, Nitin, Kurmi, Balak Das, Singh, Dilpreet, Mehan, Sidharth, Khanna, Kushagra, Karwasra, Ritu, Kumar, Shobhit, Chaudhary, Amit, Jakhmola, Vikash, Sharma, Anjana, Singh, Sachin Kumar, Dua, Kamal, and Kakkar, Dipti
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NANOPARTICLES ,POISONS ,PHYSIOLOGY ,BIOLOGICAL systems ,CHEMICAL properties - Abstract
Over the last decade, nanoparticles have found great interest among scientists and researchers working in various fields within the realm of biomedicine including drug delivery, gene delivery, diagnostics, targeted therapy and biomarker mapping. While their physical and chemical properties are impressive, there is growing concern about the toxicological potential of nanoparticles and possible adverse health effects as enhanced exposure of biological systems to nanoparticles may result in toxic effects leading to serious contraindications. Toxicity associated with nanoparticles (nanotoxicity) may include the undesired response of several physiological mechanisms including the distressing of cells by external and internal interaction with nanoparticles. However, comprehensive knowledge of nanotoxicity mechanisms and mitigation strategies may be useful to overcome the hazardous situation while treating diseases with therapeutic nanoparticles. With the same objectives, this review discusses various mechanisms of nanotoxicity and provides an overview of the current state of knowledge on the impact of nanotoxicity on biological control systems and organs including liver, brain, kidneys and lungs. An attempt also been made to present various approaches of scientific research and strategies that could be useful to overcome the effect of nanotoxicity during the development of nanoparticle-based systems including coating, doping, grafting, ligation and addition of antioxidants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Language-Specific Challenges and Solutions for Equitable Telemedicine Implementation in the Primary Care Safety Net During COVID-19.
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Sharma, Anjana E., Lisker, Sarah, Fields, Jessica D., Aulakh, Veenu, Figoni, Kathleen, Jones, Maggie E., Arora, Natasha B., Sarkar, Urmimala, and Lyles, Courtney R.
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COVID-19 pandemic ,SAFETY-net health care providers ,PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL interpreters ,TELEMEDICINE ,LANGUAGE ability - Abstract
Purpose: Telemedicine care dramatically expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic. We characterized facilitators and barriers to telemedicine implementation among safety-net primary care clinics serving patients with limited English proficiency (LEP). Methods: We collected data on telemedicine volume and patient demographics among safety-net clinics participating in a telemedicine learning collaborative. Data on various metrics were reported to the collaborative from February 2019 through August 2021. We conducted semi-structured interviews with clinical and quality leaders, purposively sampling clinics serving high proportions of patients with LEP. We analyzed interviews with a mixed inductive-deductive approach applying the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. Results: By September 2020, the 23 sites served 121,589 unique patients with in-person and 120,338 with telephone visits; 47% of these patients had LEP. Of 10,897 unique patients served by video visits, 38% had LEP. As a proportion of total visits, telemedicine (telephone and video) visits increased from 0–17% in October 2019–March 2020 to 10–98% in March–August 2020. We conducted 14 interviews at 11 sites. Themes included (1) existing telemedicine platforms and interpreter services were not optimized to support patients with LEP; (2) clinics invested significant labor iterating workflows; (3) sites with technological infrastructure and language-concordant staff were best suited to serve patients; (4) patients speaking less-represented languages or experiencing intersecting literacy barriers were underserved with telemedicine. Interviewees recommended innovations in telemedicine platforms and community-based access. Conclusions: Safety-net sites relied on existing resources to accommodate patients with LEP, but struggled providing access for the most marginalized. Proactive, data-driven strategies to address patient and community barriers as well as optimize clinical workflows with high-quality, certified medical interpreters are needed to ensure equitable access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Magnetically Separable Mg−Zn Ferrite Nanoparticles Synthesized Using Ocimum Basilicum Leaf Extract Potentiates Cytotoxicity: In vitro.
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Sharma, Anjana, Aggarwal, Nupur, Kumar, Naveen, Singh Panwar, Ranvir, Patial, Payal, Kumar Sharma, Nitish, Bala, Kanchan, Sharma, Navdeep, Tripathi, Shalini, Raja, Vaseem, and Malhotra, Saransh
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BASIL ,RIETVELD refinement ,MAGNETIC hysteresis ,HYSTERESIS loop ,NANOPARTICLES ,ZINC ferrites ,SUPERPARAMAGNETIC materials ,FERRITES ,NICKEL ferrite - Abstract
The present manuscript portrays environmental benign, cost‐effective and energy efficient green route way to synthesize Mg−Zn ferrite nanoparticles [Mg0.05Zn0.05Fe2O4 NPs] using Ocimum Basilicum leaf extract [OBLE]. X‐ray diffraction (XRD) analysis revealed that Ocimum Basilicum leaf extract mediated Mg−Zn ferrite nanoparticles [OBLE@Mg−Zn NPs] exhibit face centred cubic crystallinity with space group Fd3‾m ${{\rm F}{\rm d}\bar{3}{\rm m}}$ as confirmed by Rietveld refinement studies. Microstructural analysis illustrated uniform surface morphology with well interlinked grain with an average grain size of 35.6±0.12 nm. FTIR spectra showed existence of hydroxyl −OH group at 3403 cm−1 and C=C vibration at 2345 cm−1. Magnetic hysteresis loop (M−H loop) confirmed the superparamagnetic behaviour of OBLE@Mg−Zn NPs. Cytotoxic activity of OBLE@Mg−Zn NPs was carried out against breast cancer cell line MDA‐MB‐231. Dose dependent cell viability of cancerous cells depicted cytotoxic potential of OBLE@Mg−Zn NPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Emotional safety is patient safety.
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Lyndon, Audrey, Davis, Dána-Ain, Sharma, Anjana E., and Scott, Karen A.
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FAMILY attitudes ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HEALTH attitudes ,EMOTION regulation ,PATIENT safety - Published
- 2023
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8. Correlation of percentage of body fat and muscle mass with aerobic and anaerobic performance of nonathletic females.
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Sharma, Anjana, Nuhmani, Shibili, AGGARWAL, ANJU, AHSAN, MOHAMMAD, and SHAIKH, ABDUL LATIF
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- 2023
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9. Influence of aliovalent V3+ substitution on physicochemical characteristics of tetragonal SnO2 nanoparticles.
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Singh, Davinder, Singh, Harjinder, Kumar, Naveen, Aggarwal, Nupur, Kapoor, Anu, Sharma, Anjana, and Saini, Deepak
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CHARGE exchange ,SYMMETRY groups ,SPACE groups ,CRYSTAL structure ,PERMITTIVITY - Abstract
Polycrystalline pristine and V
3+ modified SnO2 NPs [Sn(1−x) Vx O2 NPs, where x = 0, 0.05, and 0.10] were synthesized using conventional sol-gel reaction route and their physicochemical investigations were carried out. Crystal structure information of all the compositions carried out using X-ray diffraction technique revealed that Sn(1−x) Vx O2 NPs, where x = 0, 0.05, and 0.10 exhibit tetragonal rutile type symmetry with space group P 4 / 2 m n m with phase pure crystallinity. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra showed presence of hydroxyl group (–OH) and Sn-O-Sn vibrations due to hump located at 615 cm−1 confirming the formation of NPs. Microstructural analysis depicted that the grain size decreased from 40.25 ± 1.57 nm to 33.96 ± 1.16 nm with incorporation of smaller V3+ ion in the crystal framework of host SnO2 matrix. Dielectric studies revealed that real part of dielectric constant ( ϵ ′ ) decreases with increasing the frequency of the applied bias. Maxwell Wegner model and Koop's phenomenology were implemented to support the result. The maximum value of dielectric permittivity also decreased with increasing V3+ ion in the compositions. I-V characteristics of pristine and V3+ -modified SnO2 NPs illustrated non-ohmic behavior and depicted that the resistance of the host SnO2 decreases with V3+ doping. PL spectra studies showed a characteristic hump located at ≈ 409 nm belonging to violet emission due to charge exchange mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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10. Natural sunlight driven photocatalytic dye degradation by biogenically synthesized tin oxide (SnO2) nanostructures using Tinospora crispa stem extract and its anticancer and antibacterial applications.
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Kaur, Manmeet, Prasher, Dixit, Sharma, Anjana, Ghosh, Deepa, and Sharma, Ranjana
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PHOTODEGRADATION ,NANOSTRUCTURES ,REACTIVE oxygen species ,METHYLENE blue ,TRANSMISSION electron microscopy - Abstract
In the present study, tin oxide (SnO
2 ) was synthesized by advocating the principles of green chemistry for the photo-mediated degradation of pollutants, antimicrobial, and as an antitumor agent. Bioactive SnO2 (nanorods & nanospheres) were fabricated using Tinospora crispa stem extract (TCSE) via sol–gel technique and characterized extensively. XRD, UV–VIS, FTIR, and XPS studies confirmed the formation of crystalline and well stoichiometric pure phase of SnO2 nanostructures with optical bandgap 3.2 to 3.5 eV. The transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results demonstrated the effect of secondary phytoconstituents on the shape of SnO2 in a concentration dependent manner. The morphological variations in the obtained nanostructures attributed to the nucleation density and coalescence effect leading to the formation of nanorods with an average diameter 23–25 nm whereas the average particle size of the nanospheres obtained was found to be 23–30 nm. The zeta potential value of SnO2 nanorods was high (− 58.9 mV) indicating the higher stability compared to nanospheres (− 15.6 mV). The SnO2 nanostructures were investigated for the simultaneous degradation of methylene blue with degradation efficiency of 92.3% and 47.3% for rhodamine B in mono system and 72.3%, 47.7% respectively for binary dye system. The anticancer activity of SnO2 nanorods explored against human breast cancer (MCF-7) cells revealed a concentration dependent cytotoxic effect reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced cell death. Additionally, efficient antibacterial activity of SnO2 was established using E.coli. Multifaceted applications of Tinospora crispa stem extract mediated SnO2 nanostructures [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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11. Nephroprotective potential of syringic acid in experimental diabetic nephropathy: Focus on oxidative stress and autophagy.
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Sherkhane, Bhoomika, Yerra, Veera, Sharma, Anjana, Kumar, K, Chayanika, Gundu, Kumar, Arruri, and Kumar, Ashutosh
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DIABETIC nephropathies ,NUCLEAR factor E2 related factor ,SYRINGIC acid ,OXIDATIVE stress ,CREATININE ,HYPERGLYCEMIA ,AUTOPHAGY - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a chronic hyperglycemic manifestation of microvascular damage in the kidneys. Widespread research in this area suggests the involvement of perturbed redox homeostasis and autophagy in renal cells phrase- promote the progression of DN. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Reframed sentences-The present study investigates the pharmacological effect of Syringic acid (SYA), in streptozotocin (STZ, 55 mg/kg, i.p) induced diabetic nephropathy model and in high glucose (30 mM) challenged rat renal epithelial cells (NRK 52E) cells with a focus on oxidative stress and autophagy mechanisms. RESULTS: Both in vivo and in vitro experimental data revealed elevated oxidative stress markers along with compromised levels of nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2), a pivotal cellular redox-regulated transcription factor in renal cells upon glycemic stress. Elevated blood glucose also reduced the autophagy process as indicated by low expression of light chain (LC) 3-IIB in diabetic kidney and in NRK 52E cells subjected to excess glucose. SYA (25 and 50 mg/kg, p.o.) administration for 4 weeks to diabetic rats, Reframed sentence-preserved the renal function as evidenced by reduced serum creatinine levels as well as improved urine creatinine and urea levles as compared to non treated diabetic animals. At the molecular level, SYA improved renal expression of Nrf2 and autophagy-related proteins (Atg5, Atg3, and Atg7) in diabetic rats. Similarly, SYA (10 and 20 μM) co-treatment in high glucose-treated NRK 52E cells displayed increased levels of Nrf2 and autophagy induction. CONCLUSION: Results from this study signify the renoprotective effect of SYA and highlight the modulation of oxidative stress and autophagy mechanisms to mitigate diabetic kidney disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. COVID-19–Associated Misinformation Across the South Asian Diaspora: Qualitative Study of WhatsApp Messages.
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Sharma, Anjana E, Khosla, Kiran, Potharaju, Kameswari, Mukherjea, Arnab, and Sarkar, Urmimala
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- 2023
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13. Assessment of the Posture of Adults at Their Workplace.
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Sharma, Anjana and Kalia, Raman
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HEALTH education evaluation ,WORK environment ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,BODY movement ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Introduction: "Body mechanics" is a term used to describe the ways we move and go about in our lives. It includes how we hold our body while sitting, standing, lifting, bending, carrying, or moving. Poor body mechanics can often lead to poor body posture, back pain, and related discomfort. Workers in industries and offices are exposed to various types of risk factors such as lifting heavy items, bending, reaching overhead, pushing and pulling heavy loads, working in awkward body postures, and performing the same or similar tasks repetitively, causing morbidity. Taking care of the back is a lifelong project, and use of proper body mechanics is an effective way to maintain health and fitness of the back. Objective: To assess the posture of adults at their workplace with an aim to develop a health education package on body mechanics. Methodology: Non-experimental descriptive design was used for the study. The study was conducted among 50 subjects from various organizations at Kurali, Punjab. Sociodemographic data sheet and an observation checklist were used to observe the body mechanics practices of the subjects. Results: The findings of the study revealed that 27 (54%) subjects had good body mechanics practices, 17 (34%) had average practices, whereas 6 (12%) had poor body mechanics practices. Conclusion: Only half of the workers were practicing good body mechanics; hence, there is a need to educate the workers regarding good practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. Therapeutic Options for the SARS-CoV-2 Virus: Is There a Key in Herbal Medicine?
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Sharma, Nitin, Kulkarni, Giriraj T., Bhatt, Anant Narayan, Satija, Saurabh, Singh, Lubhan, Sharma, Anjana, Dua, Kamal, Karwasra, Ritu, Khan, Asim Ali, Ahmad, Nadeem, and Raza, Khalid
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HERBAL medicine ,PATHOGENIC viruses ,DISEASE management ,LEAD compounds ,SARS virus - Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 has been responsible for over 500 million cumulative cases all over the world since December 2019 and has marked the third introduction of a highly pathogenic virus after SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV. This virus is in a winning situation because scientists are still racing to explore effective therapeutics, vaccines, and event treatment regimens. In view of progress in current disease management, until now none of the preventive/treatment measures can be considered entirely effective to treat SARS-CoV-2 infection. Therefore, it is required to look up substitute ways for the management of this disease. In this context, herbal medicines could be a good choice. This article emphasizes the antiviral potential of some herbal constituents which further can be a drug of choice in SARS-CoV-2 treatment. This article may be a ready reference for discovering natural lead compounds and targets in SARS-CoV-2 associated works. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. Warfarin Monitoring in Safety-Net Health Systems: Analysis by Race/Ethnicity and Language Preference.
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Sharma, Anjana E., Khoong, Elaine C., Rivadeneira, Natalie, Sierra, Maribel, Fang, Margaret C., Gupta, Neha, Pramanik, Rajiv, Tran, Helen, Whitezell, Tyler, Fontil, Valy, Lee, Shin-Yu, and Sarkar, Urmimala
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ANTHROPOLOGICAL linguistics ,RACE ,SAFETY-net health care providers ,WARFARIN ,INTERNATIONAL normalized ratio ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
Background: Racial/ethnic disparities in anticoagulation management are well established. Differences in warfarin monitoring can contribute to these disparities and should be measured. Objective: We assessed for differences in international normalized ratio (INR) monitoring by race/ethnicity and language preference across safety-net care systems serving predominantly low-income, ethnically diverse populations. Design: Cross-sectional analysis of process and safety data shared from the Safety Promotion Action Research and Knowledge Network (SPARK-Net) initiative, a consortium of five California safety-net hospital systems. Participants: Eligible patients were at least 18 years old, received warfarin for at least 56 days during the measurement period from July 2015 to June 2017, and had INR testing in an ambulatory care setting at a participating healthcare system. Main Measures: We conducted a scaled Poisson regression for adjusted rate ratio of having at least one INR checked per 56-day time period for which a patient had a warfarin prescription. Adjusting for age, sex, healthcare system, and insurance status/type, we assessed for racial/ethnic and language disparities in INR monitoring. Key Results: Of 8129 patients, 3615 (44%) were female; 1470 (18%), Black/African American; 3354 (41%), Hispanic/Latinx; 1210 (15%), Asian; 1643 (20%), White; and 452 (6%), other. Three thousand five hundred forty-nine (45%) were non-English preferring. We did not observe statistically significant disparities in the rate of appropriate INR monitoring by race/ethnicity or language; the primary source of variation was by healthcare network. Older age, female gender, and uninsured patients had a slightly higher rate of appropriate INR monitoring, but differences were not clinically significant. Conclusions: We did not find a race/ethnicity nor language disparity in INR monitoring; safety-net site was the main source of variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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16. Centering Health Equity in Telemedicine.
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Lyles, Courtney R., Sharma, Anjana E., Fields, Jessica D., Getachew, Yaphet, Sarkar, Urmimala, and Zephyrin, Laurie
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In the wake of the racial injustices laid bare in 2020, on top of centuries of systemic racism, it is clear we need actionable strategies to fundamentally restructure health care systems to achieve racial/ethnic health equity. This paper outlines the pillars of a health equity framework from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, overlaying a concrete example of telemedicine equity. Telemedicine is a particularly relevant and important topic, given the growing evidence of disparities in uptake by racial/ethnic, linguistic, and socioeconomic groups in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the new standard of care that telemedicine represents post-pandemic. We present approaches for telemedicine equity across the domains of: (1) strategic priorities of a health care organization, (2) structures and processes to advance equity, (3) strategies to address multiple determinants of health, (4) elimination of institutional racism and oppression, and (5) meaningful partnerships with patients and communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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17. Magnetic metamorphosis of structurally enriched hexagonal Tb3+ modified ZnO nanoparticles.
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Aggarwal, Nupur, Jindal, Shilpi, Anand, Gagan, Sharma, Anjana, Tripathi, Shalini, Vasishth, Ajay, Verma, N. K., Kumar, Sanjeev, Panwar, Ranvir Singh, and Kumar, Naveen
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Present study portrays physicochemical investigations of aliovalent rare earth ion Tb
3+ substitution of ZnO composition series [Zn(1−x) Tbx O NPs, where x = 0, 0.05, 0.10] synthesized by sol-gel route. Rietveld refinement of X-ray diffraction (XRD) profiles of all the compositions revealed that the synthesized NPs exhibit hexagonal wurtzite type crystallinity with space group P63 mc without any secondary phases or impurities. TEM images confirmed the formation of nanoscale particles with average particle diameter of 14.65 ± 1.28 nm, 18.39 ± 0.56 nm, 22.13 ± 1.17 nm for x = 0, 0.05, and 0.10, respectively. A red shift was observed in the optical band gap with the doping of Tb3+ ion in a UV-visible study. FTIR spectra showed a bend located at 491 cm−1 belonging to Zn-O stretching vibration, which confirmed the formation of pure and modified ZnO NPs. Pristine ZnO NPs [x = 0] showed negative susceptibility and diamagnetic character, and for the composition x = 0.05, paramagnetic nature was observed. Whereas, room temperature ferromagnetism (RTFM) behavior was observed in Tb3+ modified ZnO NPs [x = 0.10] with the rise in magnetic saturation by increasing doping concentration. Dielectric analysis revealed an increase of the dielectric constant of ZnO NPs with Tb3+ -doping due to the formation of oxygen vacancies. AC conductivity increases with increasing Tb3+ content in the composition. Highlights: All the compositions exhibit hexagonal wurtzite symmetry. Diamagnetic to ferromagnetic transition was observed due to Tb3+ doping in ZnO. The energy band gap decreases with the intrusion of Tb3+ ions in the ZnO crystal lattice. Dielectric permittivity decreases with increasing Tb3+ concentration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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18. Studies on the antiviral activity of chebulinic acid against dengue and chikungunya viruses and in silico investigation of its mechanism of inhibition.
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Thomas, Naiju, Patil, Poonam, Sharma, Anjana, Kumar, Sandeep, Singh, Vikas Kumar, Alagarasu, Kalichamy, Parashar, Deepti, and Tapryal, Suman
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CHIKUNGUNYA virus ,DENGUE viruses ,HERPES simplex ,TERMINALIA chebula ,VIRUS diseases ,HERPESVIRUS diseases ,BINDING sites ,FLOWERING of plants - Abstract
Chebulinic acid (CA), originally isolated from the flower extract of the plant Terminalia chebula, has been shown to inhibit infection of herpes simplex virus-2 (HSV-2), suggestively by inhibiting the host entry step of viral infection. Like HSV-2, the dengue virus (DENV) and chikungunya virus (CHIKV) also use receptor glycosaminoglycans (GAG) to gain host entry, therefore, the activity of CA was tested against these viruses. Co-treatment of 8 µM CA with DENV-2 caused 2 log decrease in the virus titer (4.0 log
10 FFU/mL) at 120 h post infection, compared to virus control (5.95 log10 FFU/mL). In contrast, no inhibitory effect of CA was observed against CHIKV infection under any condition. The mechanism of action of CA was investigated in silico by employing DENV-2 and CHIKV envelope glycoproteins. During docking, CA demonstrated equivalent binding at multiple sites on DENV-2 envelope protein, including GAG binding site, which have previously been reported to play a crucial role in host attachment and fusion, indicating blocking of these sites. However, CA did not show binding to the GAG binding site on envelope protein-2 of CHIKV. The in vitro and in silico findings suggest that CA possesses the ability to inhibit DENV-2 infection at the entry stage of its infection cycle and may be developed as a potential therapeutic agent against it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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19. Family Input for Quality and Safety (FIQS): Using mobile technology for in-hospital reporting from families and patients.
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Bardach, Naomi S., Stotts, Jim R., Fiore, Darren M., Sarkar, Urmimala, Sharma, Anjana E., Boscardin, W. John, Avina, Lizette, Peralta-Neel, Caroline, and Rosenbluth, Glenn
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- 2022
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20. Protective Effect of Organ Preservation Fluid Supplemented With Nicorandil and Rutin Trihydrate: A Comparative Study in a Rat Model of Renal Ischemia.
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Sharma, Nitin, Sharma, Anjana, Rai, Yogesh, Karwasra, Ritu, Khanna, Kushagra, Nishad, Dhruv Kumar, Bhatt, Anant Narayan, Bhatnagar, Aseem, and Kakkar, Dipti
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- 2022
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21. The Abrupt Expansion of Ambulatory Telemedicine: Implications for Patient Safety.
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Khoong, Elaine C, Sharma, Anjana E, Gupta, Kiran, Adler-Milstein, Julia, and Sarkar, Urmimala
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PATIENT safety ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,DIAGNOSTIC errors ,PATIENT participation ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
The exponential growth of telemedicine in ambulatory care triggered by the COVID-19 public health emergency has undoubtedly impacted the quality of care and patient safety. In particular, the increased adoption of remote care has impacted communication, care teams, and patient engagement, which are key factors that impact patient safety in ambulatory care. In this perspective, we draw on a scoping review of the literature, our own clinical experiences, and conversations with patient safety experts to describe how changes in communication, care teams, and patient engagement have impacted two high priority areas in ambulatory safety: diagnostic errors and medication safety. We then provide recommendations for research funders, researchers, healthcare systems, policy makers, and healthcare payors for how to improve patient safety in telemedicine based on what is currently known as well as next steps for how to advance understanding of the safety implications of telemedicine utilization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Comparative evaluation of pncA gene, IS6110 and 12.7-Kb fragment based PCR assays for simultaneous detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (M. tuberculosis and M. bovis) in cultured strains and clinical specimens.
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Verma, Rishendra, Sharma, Anjana, and Ramane, Sangram
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POLYMERASE chain reaction ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,NUCLEIC acid isolation methods ,SPUTUM ,MIXED culture (Microbiology) - Abstract
PCR based molecular techniques help in discrimination of two closely related Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. bovis. Here, we analyzed 24 M. bovis, 39 M. tuberculosis, 21 fresh acid-fast positive sputum samples and standard mycobacterial strains with pncA, 12.7 Kb and IS6100 based PCR assays. DNA from cultures and sputum yielded a positive amplification of 185 bp with M. tuberculosis specific reverse primer pncAMT-2 but not with M. bovis specific reverse primer pncAMB-2 and all M. bovis strains showed a positive amplification of 185 bp with M. bovis specific reverse primer pncAMB-2 but not with M. tuberculosis specific reverse primer pncAMT-2. The 12.7 Kb fragment based PCR performed on DNA extracted from cultures of M. tuberculosis and sputum yielded product of 168 bp while M. bovis showed 262 bp products. M. tuberculosis complex specific IS6110 PCR assay performed on DNA extracted from M. tuberculosis, M. bovis cultures and sputum samples yielded M. tuberculosis complex specific 123-bp amplified products. The sequence analysis of representative PCR products of IS6110 and 12.7 Kb fragment showed 99-100% and 100% identity in amplicon products, respectively. To test reliability of primers, M. tuberculosis and M. bovis cultures were mixed and subjected to IS6110, pncA and 12.7 Kb PCR assay. pncA primers could not successfully and reliably discriminate the mixed culture, however, 12.7 Kb fragment primers successfully discriminated the mixed culture of M. tuberculosis and M. bovis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
23. Purification and characterization of phytase from Bacillus subtilis P6: Evaluation for probiotic potential for possible application in animal feed.
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Trivedi, Shraddha, Husain, Islam, and Sharma, Anjana
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- 2022
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24. A Root Cause Analysis of Barriers to Timely Colonoscopy in California Safety-Net Health Systems.
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Sharma, Anjana E., Lyson, Helena C., Cherian, Roy, Somsouk, Ma, Schillinger, Dean, and Sarkar, Urmimala
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- 2022
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25. Tunable, conductive, self-healing, adhesive and injectable hydrogels for bioelectronics and tissue regeneration applications.
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Panwar, Vineeta, Babu, Anand, Sharma, Anjana, Thomas, Jijo, Chopra, Vianni, Malik, Pinki, Rajput, Swati, Mittal, Monika, Guha, Rajdeep, Chattopadhyay, Naibedya, Mandal, Dipankar, and Ghosh, Deepa
- Abstract
Conductive hydrogels are attracting considerable interest in view of their potential in a wide range of applications that include healthcare and electronics. Such hydrogels are generally incorporated with conductive materials/polymers. Herein, we present a series of conductive hydrogels (Ch–CMC–PDA), prepared with no additional conductive material. The hydrogels were synthesized using a combination of chitosan, cellulose (CMC) and dopamine (DA). The conductivity (0.01–3.4 × 10
−3 S cm−1 ) in these gels is attributed to ionic conductivity. Very few conductive hydrogels are endowed with additional properties like injectability, adhesiveness and self-healing, which would help to widen their scope for applications. While the dynamic Schiff base coupling in our hydrogels facilitated self-healing and injectable properties, polydopamine imparted tissue adhesiveness. The porosity, rheological, mechanical and conductive properties of the hydrogels are regulated by the CMC-dialdehyde-polydopamine (CMC-D-PDA) content. The hydrogel was evaluated in various bioelectronics applications like ECG monitoring and triboelectric nanogenerators (TENG). The ability of the hydrogel to support cell growth and serve as a template for tissue regeneration was confirmed using in vitro and in vivo studies. In summary, the integration of such remarkable features in the ionic-conductive hydrogel would enable its usage in bioelectronics and biomedical applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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26. Comparison of polymerase chain reaction, microscopy, and rapid diagnostic test in malaria detection in a high burden state (Odisha) of India.
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Ahmad, Amreen, Soni, Prahalad, Kumar, Lalit, Singh, Mrignendra Pal, Verma, Anil Kumar, Sharma, Anjana, Das, Aparup, and Bharti, Praveen Kumar
- Subjects
POLYMERASE chain reaction ,MALARIA diagnosis ,DRUG therapy for malaria ,MALARIA treatment ,MICROSCOPY - Abstract
Precise identification of Plasmodium species is critical in malaria control and elimination. Despite several shortcomings, microscopy and rapid diagnostic test (RDT) continue to be the leading diagnostic methods. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is the most sensitive method but its dependency on advanced laboratory and skilled workers limits its use. Here, we compared the diagnostic performance of microscopy, RDT, and PCR in clinically suspected patients from a high malaria burden state (Odisha) of India. The diagnostic performance (sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value) of all three methods was compared using microscopy and PCR as the gold standard. PCR identified 323 (76.5 %) positive cases out of 422 samples, whereas microscopy and RDT identified only 272 (64.4 %) and 266 (63.0 %) positive cases, respectively. The sensitivity of RDT and microscopy for detecting malaria and P. falciparum cases was >80% compared to that by PCR. However, the sensitivity in identifying P. vivax (57.0 %) and a mixture of P. falciparum and P. vivax (18.0 %) was poor. We highlight application of PCR in malaria diagnosis and its benefits in reducing the transmission. This emphasizes the need for incorporation of molecular diagnostic approaches for effective elimination strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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27. A Qualitative Analysis of Outpatient Medication Use in Community Settings: Observed Safety Vulnerabilities and Recommendations for Improved Patient Safety.
- Author
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Lyson, Helena C., Sharma, Anjana E., Cherian, Roy, Patterson, Emily S., McDonald, Kathryn M., Lee, Shin-Yu, and Sarkar, Urmimala
- Published
- 2021
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28. Using incident reporting to understand and characterize sexual harassment of physicians by patients.
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Hemmat, Shirin, Khoong, Elaine C, Olazo, Kristan, Sharma, Anjana E, Mangurian, Christina, Fernandez, Alicia, and Sarkar, Urmimala
- Abstract
It is likely that physicians did not report sexual harassment incidents perpetrated by patients because they did not expect a supportive institutional response. Next steps include determining best practices for how physicians, supervisors, and institutions can better address and prevent incidents of physician sexual harassment by patients. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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29. Quantitative analysis of herpes simplex virus-1 transcript in suspected viral keratitis corneal buttons and its clinical significance.
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Anjum, Shahzan, Sen, Seema, Agarwal, Rinky, Sharma, Namrata, Kashyap, Seema, and Sharma, Anjana
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HERPES simplex ,KERATITIS ,KERATOCONUS ,REVERSE transcriptase ,GENES ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DNA ,HERPES simplex keratitis ,VIRAL eye infections ,HERPESVIRUSES ,CORNEA - Abstract
Purpose: The evaluation of Herpes Simplex virus-1 (HSV-1) transcript by different investigative methods (qPCR, PCR and IHC) in corneal buttons from suspected viral keratitis patients and the comparison of results with histopathological findings and clinical diagnosis.Methods: Sixty corneal buttons, 30 suspected viral keratitis, and 30 controls (keratoconus and bullous keratopathy) obtained after primary penetrating keratoplasty, were included in the study. All the corneal buttons were subjected to reverse transcriptase quantitative PCR (qPCR) for the detection of latency-associated transcript (LAT) gene, conventional PCR for polymerase (pol) gene, and immunohistochemistry (IHC) for HSV-1 antigen respectively. After obtaining baseline preoperative clinical data, all the patients were followed up for three years. The results obtained were correlated with clinicopathological features and follow-up data.Results: Of the 30 suspected viral keratitis patients there were 6 females and 24 males with mean age 46.5 ± 24.62 years (3-80 yrs). There was a marked male preponderance (80%). HSV-1 LAT transcript was detected in 23% (7/30) corneal buttons by qPCR, HSV-1 DNA in 6.7% (2/30) and HSV-1 antigen in 30% (9/30) cases by conventional PCR and IHC respectively. A statistically significant association was found between qPCR and DNA PCR (P = 0.04). All the 30 control corneas were negative for HSV-1 LAT gene, DNA and antigen.Conclusion: Detection of HSV-1 LAT transcript by qPCR may be superior to HSV-1 DNA PCR (conventional) and IHC, which has low sensitivity. However, the utility of HSV-1 LAT mRNA analysis as a diagnostic modality by qPCR needs to be validated on a larger patient cohort. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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30. Investigation of dielectric, electrical and optical properties of copper substituted Mn-Zn nanoferrites.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana, Batoo, Khalid Mujasam, Aldossary, Omar M., Jindal, Shilpi, Aggarwal, Nupur, and Kumar, Gagan
- Subjects
DIELECTRIC loss ,OPTICAL properties ,TRANSITION metals ,PERMITTIVITY ,ELECTROMAGNETIC devices ,DIELECTRICS - Abstract
Transition metal such as Copper substituted Mn-Zn magnetic nano ferrite with general formula Mn
0.5 Zn0.5 Cux Fe2−x O4 (x = 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3) were fabricated by solution combustion method and expose how significant properties of the samples are modified accordingly by dopant concentration. By FTIR spectroscopy various functional group present in Mn-Zn ferrites is studied. The optical plots revealed bandgap energy reduced from 2.42 to 1.82 eV although the electrical study shown the highest conductivity of synthesized nano ferrite is 1.93 × 10−8 Scm−1 . The dielectric constant as well as dielectric loss behavior recorded at room temperature and were analyzed with increasing temperature; both dielectric constant and loss tangent upsurge however with increasing frequency both are observed to reduce. Doping with Cu has the potentiality of accumulative dielectric constant and conductivity of Mn0.5 Zn0.5 Cux Fe2−x O4 thereby improving its application for electromagnetic devices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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31. Effect of chromium ions on the structural, magnetic, and optical properties of manganese–zinc ferrite nanoparticles.
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Sharma, Anjana, Batoo, Khalid Mujasam, Raslan, Emad H., and Kumar, Gagan
- Subjects
ZINC ferrites ,CHROMIUM ions ,REMANENCE ,DIELECTRIC loss ,OPTICAL properties ,FERRITES - Abstract
The present work describes the synthesis of Mn
0.5 Zn0.5 Crx Fe2−x O4 (x = 0.1, 0.2, 0.3) ferrite nanoparticles by solution combustion method and their detailed structural, electrical, magnetic, and optical characterizations. X-ray pattern represents the creation of a single spinel structure. In addition to this, the distribution of cations is also approximated from X-ray study which is then authenticated by the magnetization technique also. The crystalline size (23–21 nm) and lattice parameter (8.39–8.30 Å) are found to shrink with the rise in chromium ions. A decrease in saturation magnetization (0.80–0.64 emu/g) and remanent magnetization (0.05–0.03 emu/g) is found with the rise in chromium ions, while the coercivity is found to increase (83–123 Oe) through the adding of chromium ions. FTIR predicted the two absorption bands (ν1 and ν2 ) near 600 and 400 cm−1 . Dielectric constant and loss tangent were observed to decrease with an increase in frequency, whereas AC conductivity attains a nearly constant value at a lower frequency and observed to increase at higher frequencies with the addition of dopant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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32. Comparison of Yield, Nutrient Content and Antibacterial Activities of Wild and Cultivated Isolates of Pleurotus djamor.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana, Jandaik, Savita, and Thakur, Neetika
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PLEUROTUS ,AGRICULTURAL wastes ,ORGANIC wastes ,PLEUROTUS ostreatus ,WASTE products ,WHEAT straw ,EDIBLE mushrooms - Abstract
Background: Pleurotus species constitutes one of the choicest edible mushrooms, it is commonly known as "Oyster Mushroom" and in India it is commonly called as "Dhingri. It has important medicinal, biotechnological properties and environmental applications. Its cultivation can be done on a number of agricultural wastes and organic waste materials. There are significant problems in classifying Pleurotus isolates using only morphological characters which are often unreliable and inconclusive mainly due to the large influence exerted by environmental factors. Methods: A wild isolate of Pleurotus was collected from North western Himalayas and its identity was confirmed by molecular studies. Yield, nutritional components and its bioactive molecules were compared with the cultivated isolate of Pleurotus djamore Antibacterial activities of both the isolates of were performed against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus by disc diffusion. Result: Molecular studies confirmed the identity of wild isolate of Pleurotus as Pleurotus djamore. The maximum yield of wild isolate was on paddy straw followed by wheat straw. The protein content was 32.3±0.50g
-1 in wild isolate and 28.7±1.67g-1 in cultivated isolate. Presence of nutritional components and phytochemicals inferred in this study indicate the importance of Pleurotus djamore in the pharmaceutica [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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33. Vimentin overexpression as a novel poor prognostic biomarker in eyelid sebaceous gland carcinoma.
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Bhardwaj, Mansi, Sen, Seema, Chosdol, Kunzang, Bakhshi, Sameer, Pushker, Neelam, Sharma, Anjana, Kashyap, Seema, Bajaj, Mandeep S., and Singh, Vijay Kumar
- Abstract
Background Vimentin is an intermediate-sized filament which is highly expressed in mesenchymal cells and is associated with epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). EMT markers ZEB2 and Slug lead to Vimentin overexpression and E-cadherin loss, resulting in invasion and metastasis. However, the status of Vimentin remains unexplored in eyelid sebaceous gland carcinoma (SGC). The study aims to determine status of Vimentin in SGC and its association with EMT markers E-cadherin, ZEB2 and Slug.///Methods Vimentin protein expression was undertaken in 66 cases with SGC by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Messenger RNA (mRNA) expression was determined in 42 fresh tissues by quantitative real-time PCR. Association of Vimentin with E-cadherin, ZEB2 and Slug was also analysed. Patients were followed up for 17-69 months (mean 34.02 ± 14.73 months).///Results IHC revealed Vimentin overexpression in 37/66 (56%) cases. This overexpression showed significant association with lymph node metastasis (p=0.004) and pagetoid spread (p=0.05). Patients with high Vimentin expression also had poor disease-free survival (p=0.033). Univariate Cox regression model indicated that high Vimentin expression (p=0.043) and advanced tumour stage (p=0.002) were independent adverse prognostic factors. High Vimentin mRNA expression was seen in 16/42 (38%) cases and correlated significantly with lymph node metastasis (p=0.027), advanced tumour stage (p=0.002) and large tumour size (p=0.023). Vimentin expression overall showed a significant inverse association with E-cadherin and direct association with ZEB2 expression.///Conclusions Vimentin overexpression in SGC is associated with EMT and leads to poor clinical outcome. It also emerged as a novel predictor for lymph node metastasis and poor survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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34. Arginine deaminase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa PS2: purification, biochemical characterization and in-vitro evaluation of anticancer activity.
- Author
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Bala, Kiran, Husain, Islam, and Sharma, Anjana
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PSEUDOMONAS aeruginosa ,PHASE-contrast microscopy ,ARGININE ,MOLECULAR weights ,CELL cycle ,ELASTASES ,PROTEINASES - Abstract
In the present study, arginine deaminase (ADI) was purified from Pseudomonas aeruginosa PS2 which showed relative molecular mass of 70 ± 3 kDa on native-PAGE and 36 ± 0.5 kDa on SDS-PAGE. Purified ADI exhibited optimum activity at pH 6.5 and temperature 40 ºC. Metal ions, K
+ and Mg2+ had positive, while Mn2+ , Cr2+ , Co2+ , Fe3+ , Ni2+ , Cu2+ , Cd2+ and Hg2+ had negative effects on catalytic activity of ADI. Purified enzyme showed high substrate specificity towards natural substrate L-arginine and did not hydrolyse its structural analogues. In-vitro serum half-life of purified ADI was 40 h, whereas proteolytic half-life was 28, 27, and 32 min against trypsin, elastase-I and proteinase-K, respectively. Anticancer activity of ADI has been evaluated against panel of human cancer cell lines (LS-180, HCT-116, MCF-7, BT-549, T47D, HL-60, MOLT-4, K-562, and PC-3) but lowest IC50 1.2 IU ml−1 was recorded with MCF-7 cells. Colony forming assay, wound-healing migration assay, phase contrast microscopy, DAPI staining, cell cycle analysis and DNA laddering assay revealed that ADI treatment induced apoptotic cell death in dose dependent manner. Increased level of MMP loss, ROS generation and decreased level of SOD, CAT, GPx and GSH displayed ADI treatment induced mitochondrial dysfunctioning. Furthermore, purified ADI had no substantial toxicity against human normal cell lines and blood erythrocytes. These findings suggesting that purified ADI could be developed as an anticancer agent but more in depth studies are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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35. Interaction of Carbon Dots with Endothelial Cells: Implications for Biomedical Applications.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana, Panwar, Vineeta, Chopra, Vianni, Thomas, Jijo, Kaushik, Swati, and Ghosh, Deepa
- Published
- 2019
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36. A SURVEY OF EARTHWORM DIVERSITY IN DIFFERENT LAND USE TYPES IN MID HILLS OF NORTHWEST HIMALAYAS, INDIA.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana, Ahmed, Shakoor, and Julka, Jatinder M.
- Subjects
LAND use ,EARTHWORMS ,NUMBERS of species ,MIXED forests ,MEGASCOLECIDAE ,GEOLOGIC hot spots ,GRASSLAND soils - Abstract
Copyright of Megadrilogica is the property of Megadrilogica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
37. Plasmodium falciparum glutamate dehydrogenase is genetically conserved across eight malaria endemic states of India: Exploring new avenues of malaria elimination.
- Author
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Ahmad, Amreen, Verma, Anil Kumar, Krishna, Sri, Sharma, Anjana, Singh, Neeru, and Bharti, Praveen Kumar
- Subjects
MALARIA ,GLUTAMATE dehydrogenase ,PLASMODIUM falciparum ,AMINO acid sequence ,LACTATE dehydrogenase - Abstract
Accurate and timely diagnosis is very critical for management, control and elimination of the malaria. Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) have improved the diagnosis and management of malaria in remote areas, community and places where microscopy is not available for diagnosis. According to WHO report 2018, Plasmodium falciparum malaria constitutes more than 50% of malaria cases in India. Most of the RDTs used for diagnosis of falciparum malaria today employ HRP2 as a target antigen. However, low density parasitemia and deletion of hrp-2 gene in P. falciparum leads to false negative results and necessitates the development of alternative/ new or improved RDT for malaria diagnosis. We have analysed the genetic diversity and homology modelling of Pfgdh (glutamate dehydrogenase), ldh (lactate dehydrogenase) and aldolase genes in P. falciparum isolates from the eight endemic states of India to assess their potential as antigen for RDT development. We observed negligible sequence diversity in Pfgdh in comparison to the low level of diversity in ldh and aldolase gene. No structural or functional changes were observed in modelling studies and all three genes were under negative purifying selection pressure. The highly conserved nature of pfgdh gene suggests that GDH could be a potential target molecule for Pan/Pf diagnostic test for malaria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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38. Microsatellite Diversity, Complexity, and Host Range of Mycobacteriophage Genomes of the Siphoviridae Family.
- Author
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Alam, Chaudhary Mashhood, Iqbal, Asif, Sharma, Anjana, Schulman, Alan H., and Ali, Safdar
- Subjects
SPATIAL variation ,MICROSATELLITE repeats ,GENOMES - Abstract
The incidence, distribution, and variation of simple sequence repeats (SSRs) in viruses is instrumental in understanding the functional and evolutionary aspects of repeat sequences. Full-length genome sequences retrieved from NCBI were used for extraction and analysis of repeat sequences using IMEx software. We have also developed two MATLAB-based tools for extraction of gene locations from GenBank in tabular format and simulation of this data with SSR incidence data. Present study encompassing 147 Mycobacteriophage genomes revealed 25,284 SSRs and 1,127 compound SSRs (cSSRs) through IMEx. Mono- to hexa-nucleotide motifs were present. The SSR count per genome ranged from 78 (M100) to 342 (M58) while cSSRs incidence ranged from 1 (M138) to 17 (M28, M73). Though cSSRs were present in all the genomes, their frequency and SSR to cSSR conversion percentage varied from 1.08 (M138 with 93 SSRs) to 8.33 (M116 with 96 SSRs). In terms of localization, the SSRs were predominantly localized to coding regions (∼78%). Interestingly, genomes of around 50 kb contained a similar number of SSRs/cSSRs to that in a 110 kb genome, suggesting functional relevance for SSRs which was substantiated by variation in motif constitution between species with different host range. The three species with broad host range (M97, M100, M116) have around 90% of their mono-nucleotide repeat motifs composed of G or C and only M16 has both A and T mononucleotide motifs. Around 20% of the di-nucleotide repeat motifs in the genomes exhibiting a broad host range were CT/TC, which were either absent or represented to a much lesser extent in the other genomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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39. Patient Engagement in Community Health Center Leadership: How Does it Happen?
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana E., Huang, Beatrice, Knox, Margae, Willard-Grace, Rachel, and Potter, Michael B.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY health services ,HEALTH services administration ,INTERVIEWING ,LEADERSHIP ,QUALITY assurance ,PATIENT participation ,QUALITATIVE research ,HUMAN services programs ,PATIENT-centered care ,PATIENT decision making - Abstract
Patient engagement in primary care leadership is an important means to involve community voices at community health centers. Federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) are mandated to have patient representation within their governing boards, while practices seeking patient-centered medical home certification receive credit for implementing patient advisory councils (PACs). Our objective was to compare and contrast how community health centers engage patients in clinic management, decision-making and planning within governing boards versus PACs. Qualitative study conducted from August 2016 to June 2017 at community health centers in California, Arizona and Hawaii. We interviewed practice leaders of patient engagement programs at their site. Eligible clinics had patient representatives within their governing board, PAC, or both. We assessed patient demographics, roles and responsibilities of patients participating, and extent of involvement in quality improvement among governing boards versus PACs. We interviewed 19 sites, of which 17 were FQHCs that had governing boards. Of the 17 FQHCs, 11 had also implemented PACs. Two non-FQHC safety-net sites had PACs but did not have governing boards. Governing board members had formal, structured membership responsibilities such as finances and hiring personnel. PAC roles were more flexible, focusing on day-to-day clinic operations. Clinics tended to recruit governing board patient members for their skill set and professional experience; PAC member recruitment focused more on demographic representation of the clinic’s patient population. Both groups worked on quality improvement, but governing boards tended to review clinic performance metrics, while PAC members were involved in specific project planning and implementation to improve clinical outcomes and patient experience. Patient involvement in clinic improvement in CHCs includes higher-level decision-making and governance through mechanisms such as governing boards, as well as engagement in day-to-day practice improvement through PACs. These roles offer differing, but valuable insights to clinic programs and policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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40. A 20-year experience of ocular herpes virus detection using immunofluorescence and polymerase chain reaction.
- Author
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Satpathy, Gita, Behera, Himansu S., Sharma, Anjana, Mishra, Abhisek K., Mishra, Deepanshi, Sharma, Namrata, Tandon, Radhika, Agarwal, Tushar, and Titiyal, Jeewan S.
- Subjects
HERPES simplex keratitis ,IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,OPHTHALMOLOGISTS ,OPTICAL coherence tomography ,CORNEA ,CORNEAL transplantation ,DIAGNOSTIC errors ,DNA ,FLUORESCENT antibody technique ,HERPESVIRUSES ,VIRAL antigens ,PREDICTIVE tests ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Background: To detect the presence of herpes virus in corneal scrapings/corneal grafts of suspected herpetic keratitis patients attending the outpatient department/casualty of the Dr Rajendra Prasad Centre for Ophthalmic Sciences, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi for the past 20 years with immunofluorescence assay and to analyse the efficacy of polymerase chain reaction over immunofluorescence for routine laboratory diagnosis in some of the specimens.Methods: Corneal scrapings and corneal grafts were collected by the ophthalmologists from 1,926 suspected herpetic keratitis patients between 1996 and 2015, among whom 1,863 patients were processed with immunofluorescence assay and 302 patients were processed with polymerase chain reaction assay for the detection of herpes virus. Of the 302 patients, clinical specimens from 239 patients were analysed by both polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescence assay.Results: Of the 1,863 suspected herpetic keratitis patients diagnosed with immunofluorescence assay, 277 (14.9 per cent) were found positive for herpes simplex virus 1 antigen. Similarly, of the 302 suspected herpetic keratitis patients diagnosed by polymerase chain reaction, 70 (23.2 per cent) were found positive for herpes simplex virus DNA. Of the 239 patients diagnosed by both polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescence assay, 35 (14.6 per cent) were found positive with immunofluorescence assay, 59 (24.7 per cent) were found positive with polymerase chain reaction, 30 (12.5 per cent) were positive with both immunofluorescence and polymerase chain reaction assay.Conclusion: Efficacy and accuracy of the polymerase chain reaction assay was greater compared to the immunofluorescence assay for detection of herpes virus in corneal scrapings/corneal grafts of suspected herpetic keratitis patients. Although the immunofluorescence assay is a rapid test for the detection of herpes virus in suspected herpetic keratitis patients, a combination of polymerase chain reaction with immunofluorescence assay will provide higher reliable and accurate results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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41. Development and Gamma Scintigraphy Study of Trigonella foenum-graecum (Fenugreek) Polysaccharide-Based Colon Tablet.
- Author
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Sharma, Nitin, Sharma, Anjana, Nishad, Dhruv K., Khanna, Kushagra, Sharma, Braj Gaurav, Kakkar, Dipti, and Bhatnagar, Aseem
- Abstract
The major concern with the use of some synthetic excipients is their safety towards biological tissues, hence influencing the reliability of products. With the aim to minimize dependency on highly toxic synthetic excipients, the present study was designed to deliver metronidazole (MNZ) into the colonic region for localized treatment of amoebiasis using natural polysaccharide-based drug delivery. Compression-coated tablets were prepared using water extractable natural polysaccharide from Trigonella foenum-graecum (FG). Physical properties of the tablets were evaluated and dissolution study was performed at pH 1.2, 6.8, and 7.4 with rat cecal material. Results indicate that all batches demonstrated pH-dependent drug release and prevented release into the stomach, allowing traces into the intestine and highest availability into the colon. A significant correlation (r
2 = 0.975) was found between the coating levels of extracted polysaccharide and lag time release of drug. Gamma scintigraphy images of in vivo study conducted on human volunteers showed a small intestinal transit time, i.e., 3-5 (4.2 ± 0.4) h and confirmed that the tablets reached the colon within 6-8 h. The present study revealed that the FG polysaccharide-based double compression tablets may be promising colon-specific drug carriers with reduced toxic effects of commonly used synthetic excipients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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42. p16INK4a overexpression as a predictor of survival in ocular surface squamous neoplasia.
- Author
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Chauhan, Sheetal, Sen, Seema, Sharma, Anjana, Kashyap, Seema, Tandon, Radhika, Bajaj, Mandeep S., Pushker, Neelam, Vanathi, Murugesan, and Chauhan, Shyam S.
- Abstract
Aims To evaluate the expression and methylation status of the p16
INK4a gene in early and advanced American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stages of ocular surface squamous neoplasia (OSSN) and to correlate its association with clinicopathological features and survival. Methods Sixty-four (35 early and 29 advanced AJCC stage) patients with OSSN formed part of this study and were followed up for 36--58 (mean 48±3.6) months. Immunohistochemical expression of the p16INK4a protein and methylation status of the p16INK4a gene were determined by methylation-specific PCR. results Overexpression of p16INK4a was observed in 18/64 (28%) and hypermethylation in 35/64 (54.7%) OSSN cases. A gradual significant increase in the expression of p16INK4a (0%--48%, P=0.03) and decrease in its methylation (75%--16%, P=0.001) was observed with disease progression from early to advanced tumour stage. Overexpression of p16INK4a was significantly associated with palpebral location and diffuse growth pattern in both early and advanced T stage. Hypermethylation of p16INK4a was significantly associated with history of longer sunlight exposure in both early and advanced T stage of OSSN cases. In advanced T stage, p16INK4a overexpression was associated with reduced disease-free survival (P=0.02) and poor prognosis (HR, 0.2; P=0.03). Conclusions OSSN patients presenting at an advanced AJCC stage with p16INK4a overexpression may require more aggressive treatment. Epigenetic inactivation of the p16INK4a gene due to sunlight exposure could be responsible for pathogenesis of OSSN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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43. Knowledge on Health Consequences of Early and Late Marriage among Students at Selected College, East Sikkim.
- Author
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Shadap, Arkierupaia, Devi, Thoibi, Sharma, Anjana, Sapkota, Anu, Sharma, Yamuna, Basnett, Srijana, Sharma, Ashma, Thapa, Binita, Bhutia, Kesang, Bhutia, Pema D., Bhutia, Karma Dorna, Bhutia, Tashi Lamu, Bhutia, Passang Kee, Subba, Sunita, Rai, Karishma, and Sherpa, Passang Dikki
- Subjects
MARRIAGE & psychology ,CHILD marriage ,QUANTITATIVE research ,PUBLIC health ,ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Marriage is the blending together of two lives, two personalities of the opposite sex for as long as two shall live in this world. It is the building law of God and protects the mankind. But early and late marriage may have an adverse health consequence. A study was conducted to assess the knowledge on health consequences of early and late marriage among students at selected college of Sikkim. Investigators adopted the quantitative approach using the descriptive survey research design through convenient sampling technique. Structured knowledge questionnaire on health consequences of early and late marriage were developed and sent for validation to experts before collecting the data. Result shows that majority 84% and 49% has moderate knowledge, 12% and 47% has poor knowledge and 4% each has good knowledge on health consequences of early and late marriage respectively. The study reveals that there was no significant association of knowledge on health consequences of early and late marriage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
44. The impact of patient advisors on healthcare outcomes: a systematic review.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana E., Knox, Margae, Mleczko, Victor L., and Olayiwola, J. Nwando
- Subjects
PATIENTS ,ADVISORY boards ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PATIENT satisfaction ,CINAHL database ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,POLICY sciences ,PATIENT participation ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Background: Patient advisory councils are a way for healthcare organizations to promote patient engagement. Despite mandates to implement patient advisory councils through programs like the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH), there is a paucity of data measuring the impact of patients functioning in advisory roles. Our objective is to investigate whether patient engagement in patient advisory councils is linked to improvements in clinical quality, patient safety or patient satisfaction.Methods: We searched PubMed, SCOPUS, CINAHL and Google Scholar for English language publications between November 2002 to August 2015, using a combination of "patient advisor" and "care outcomes" search terms. Article selection utilized dual screening facilitated by DistillerSR software, with group discussion to resolve discordance. Observational studies, randomized controlled trials, and case studies were included that described patients serving in an advisory role where primary outcomes were mentioned. Reference lists of included studies and grey literature searches were conducted. Qualitative thematic analysis was performed to synthesize results.Results: Database searching yielded 639 articles total after removing duplicates, with 129 articles meeting full text inclusion criteria. 32 articles were identified for final review, 16 of which were case studies. Advisory roles included patient advisory councils, ad-hoc patient committees, community advisory councils, experience-based co-design, and other. Four practice-based studies from one research group, involving community advisors in the design of public health interventions, found improved clinical outcomes. No prospective experimental studies assessed the impact of patient advisors on patient safety or patient satisfaction. One cluster-randomized RCT showed that patient advisors helped health care planning efforts identify priorities more aligned with the PCMH. Ten case studies reported anecdotal benefit to individual patient advisors.Conclusion: Five included studies demonstrate promising methods for evaluating patient engagement in healthcare delivery and describe impacts on clinical outcomes and priority setting. Based on the case studies found, patient advisors tend to contribute to patient-facing services that may affect clinical care but are not easily evaluated. As clinics and hospitals implement patient advisory councils, rigorous evaluation of their programs is needed to support the expansion of system-level patient engagement.Trial Registration: This systematic review was registered in the PROSPERO database of the University of York Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (ID: 2015: CRD42015030020 ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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45. Phenotypic and molecular assessment of chickpea rhizobia from different chickpea cultivars of India.
- Author
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Sharma, Anu, Bandamaravuri, Kishore, Sharma, Anjana, and Arora, Dillip
- Subjects
CHICKPEA ,SYMBIOSIS ,RHIZOBIACEAE ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing ,PLANT diversity - Abstract
In the present study, heterogeneity in natural chickpea rhizobia populations associated with 18 different chickpea ( Cicer arientinum) cultivars of India was investigated. Physiological diversity of 20 chickpea rhizobia was characterized based on phenotypic parameters such as Bromothymol blue (BTB) test, pH, temperature and salinity tolerance. Based on response to BTB test and pH tolerance, all chickpea rhizobia were further divided into slow growers/alkali producers (14 isolates) and fast growers/acid producers (6 isolates). The temperature (upto 40 °C) and salinity (NaCl) tolerance (upto 6%) tests provided a wide description of physiological diversity among the rhizobial isolates. The intrinsic antibiotic resistance of each isolate against 14 different antibiotics distinguished all chickpea rhizobia into five clades at the level of 80% similarity coefficient. Further, based on UPGMA phylogeny of carbon utilization profile, all isolates were dispersed into six clusters at the level of 85% similarity coefficient, which indicated a remarkable variability among the rhizobia. The evaluation of nodule-forming efficiency of all isolates revealed that the isolate ACR15 was more competent for nodule formation than all other isolates. The representative strain from each carbon metabolic cluster was further subjected for molecular identification through 16S rRNA gene characterization. Neighbour-joining method-based phylogeny of 16S rRNA gene sequence revealed a high degree of species diversity among the isolates. Further, the prominent nodule-forming isolate such as ACR15 was identified as Mesorhizobium ciceri, while other isolates showed similarity with other species of Mesorhizobium genus. The present study contributed to the knowledge that besides M. ciceri and M. mediterraneum, chickpea can also be nodulated by many other native chickpea rhizobia which indicates the impact of exploration of promising native populations. These findings may support the further investigation of symbiotic as well as stress responsive genes of chickpea rhizobia leading to develop more effective inoculant strains for wide agricultural applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Phenotypic and molecular assessment of chickpea rhizobia from different chickpea cultivars of India.
- Author
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Sharma, Anu, Bandamaravuri, Kishore, Sharma, Anjana, and Arora, Dillip
- Subjects
CHICKPEA ,RHIZOBIACEAE ,ANTIBIOTICS ,RIBOSOMAL RNA ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing - Abstract
In the present study, heterogeneity in natural chickpea rhizobia populations associated with 18 different chickpea ( Cicer arientinum) cultivars of India was investigated. Physiological diversity of 20 chickpea rhizobia was characterized based on phenotypic parameters such as Bromothymol blue (BTB) test, pH, temperature and salinity tolerance. Based on response to BTB test and pH tolerance, all chickpea rhizobia were further divided into slow growers/alkali producers (14 isolates) and fast growers/acid producers (6 isolates). The temperature (upto 40 °C) and salinity (NaCl) tolerance (upto 6%) tests provided a wide description of physiological diversity among the rhizobial isolates. The intrinsic antibiotic resistance of each isolate against 14 different antibiotics distinguished all chickpea rhizobia into five clades at the level of 80% similarity coefficient. Further, based on UPGMA phylogeny of carbon utilization profile, all isolates were dispersed into six clusters at the level of 85% similarity coefficient, which indicated a remarkable variability among the rhizobia. The evaluation of nodule-forming efficiency of all isolates revealed that the isolate ACR15 was more competent for nodule formation than all other isolates. The representative strain from each carbon metabolic cluster was further subjected for molecular identification through 16S rRNA gene characterization. Neighbour-joining method-based phylogeny of 16S rRNA gene sequence revealed a high degree of species diversity among the isolates. Further, the prominent nodule-forming isolate such as ACR15 was identified as Mesorhizobium ciceri, while other isolates showed similarity with other species of Mesorhizobium genus. The present study contributed to the knowledge that besides M. ciceri and M. mediterraneum, chickpea can also be nodulated by many other native chickpea rhizobia which indicates the impact of exploration of promising native populations. These findings may support the further investigation of symbiotic as well as stress responsive genes of chickpea rhizobia leading to develop more effective inoculant strains for wide agricultural applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Evaluation of Antitumor Activity of Glutaminase-Free Periplasmic Asparaginase from Indigenous Bacterial Isolates as Candidates for Cancer Therapy.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana and Husain, Islam
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Engaging patients in primary care practice transformation: theory, evidence and practice.
- Author
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Sharma, Anjana E. and Grumbach, Kevin
- Subjects
PATIENT participation ,PATIENT-centered care ,PATIENT-centered medical homes ,CLINICS ,MEDICAL care research ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,PRIMARY health care ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PROFESSIONAL practice - Abstract
Patient engagement is a fundamental strategy for achieving patient centred care and is receiving increasing attention in primary care reform efforts such as the patient-centred medical home and related care models. Much of the prior published theory and evidence supporting patient engagement has focused on improving engagement in individual care. Much less is understood about engaging patients as partners in practice improvement at the primary care clinic or practice level. We review the historical and policy context for the growing interest in the USA and UK in patient engagement at the primary care practice level, highlight findings from systematic reviews of the research evidence on practice-level patient engagement and discuss practical considerations for implementing patient engagement. We conclude that while there are persuasive ethical and social justice reasons for empowering patient involvement in practice improvement at the clinic level, research conducted to date in primary care provides suggestive but not yet resounding evidence in support of the instrumental triple aim benefit of practice-level patient engagement. We propose a research agenda to better understand the process and outcomes of practice-level patient engagement and its potential advantages to both the practice and the patients and communities served. Better evidence as well as resources to support and incentivize effective and feasible engagement methods are needed to catalyse greater diffusion of practice-level patient engagement in primary care practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. miRNA-200c and miRNA-141 as potential prognostic biomarkers and regulators of epithelial- mesenchymal transition in eyelid sebaceous gland carcinoma.
- Author
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Bhardwaj, Mansi, Sen, Seema, Chosdol, Kunzang, Sharma, Anjana, Pushker, Neelam, Kashyap, Seema, Bakhshi, Sameer, and Bajaj, Mandeep S.
- Abstract
Background MicroRNA (miRNA)-200c and miRNA-141 are tumour suppressors, which regulate epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), leading to tumour invasion and metastasis in various malignancies. miRNA-200c and miRNA-141 maintain the epithelial phenotype by post-transcriptionally inhibiting the E-cadherin repressors, zinc finger E-box binding homeobox (ZEB)1 and ZEB2. The present study was performed to determine the prognostic significance of miRNA-200c and miRNA-141, and their association with EMT markers ZEB1, ZEB2 and E-cadherin in eyelid sebaceous gland carcinoma (SGC). Methods Expression levels of miRNA-200c and miRNA-141 were determined in 42 eyelid SGC cases by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). Their association with ZEB1, ZEB2 and E-cadherin was determined by qPCR and immunohistochemistry. Kaplan-Meier plots and Spearman's rank correlation tests were applied to analyse the data. Patients were followed up for 7-44 months. Results Low expression levels of miRNA-200c and miRNA-141 were seen in 36/42 (86%) and 28/42 (67%) cases, respectively. Low miRNA-200c correlated significantly with large tumour size (p=0.03) and poor differentiation (p=0.03). Low miRNA-141 correlated significantly with large tumour size (p=0.02) and lymph node metastasis (p=0.04). Survival analysis revealed that patients with low miRNA-200c (p<0.05) and miRNA-141 expression (p=0.07) had shorter disease-free survival. There was a significant association of both miRNA-200c and miRNA-141 with E-cadherin and ZEB2 expression. Conclusions Low levels of miRNA-200c and miRNA-141 in patients with eyelid SGC facilitates tumour progression by promoting EMT and miRNA-200c has emerged as a novel potential predictor of survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Estimation of Guggulsterone E and Z in the Guggul‑based Commercial Formulations Using High‑performance Thin‑layer Chromatography.
- Author
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Sairkar, Pramod Kumar, Sharma, Anjana, and Shukla, N. P.
- Subjects
COMMIPHORA wightii ,THIN layer chromatography ,HERBAL medicine ,ISOMERS ,ABSORPTION spectra ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Guggulsterone (GS) is a plant steroid and bioactive compound present in gum Guggul of Commiphora wightii. An Indian herbal medicine system “Ayurveda” has a long history of use of gum Guggul and plant extract of C. wightii as medicine for the treatment of various illnesses. Complex nature, low availability, and inconsistency of phytoconstituents make its analysis of difficult tasks. Aims: In this work, six different Guggul-based herbal formulations were examined for estimation of GS and their isomers (E and Z) through high-performance thin-layer chromatography technique. Materials and Methods: For that various concentrations of standard E-GS and Z-GS (50 ng–250 ng/spot) with samples (20 μg/spot) were applied on silica gel coated aluminum plate and developed with the mobile phase of toluene: ethyl acetate: formic acid: methanol (6:2:1:0.5). The scanning was performed at 254 nm wavelength and the absorbance (scan) spectrum of E-GS and Z-GS peak was generated at 200 nm–400 nm wavelength range. Results and Conclusions: Rf value and scan spectrum pattern of the samples reveal that they contain either one form of GS (E-GS, Z-GS) or both. The quantity of E-GS and Z-GS within the samples was ranged from 0.230 ± 0.0040–0.926 ± 0.0168% to 0.537 ± 0.0026–0.723 ± 0.0177%, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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