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1

Constantinescu, Andreea Doria, and Alexandra Gherman. "Professor Nirmal Surya, Neurologist at Bombay Hospital & Saifee Hospital, Mumbai, India: Adapted Interview from the 12th World Congress for NeuroRehabilitation (WCNR), Vienna, 2022." Journal of Medicine and Life 16, no. 2 (February 2023): 180–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.25122/jml-2023-1006.

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2

Naznin, Bepasha. "Detection of a Rare Blood Group ‘Bombay (Oh) Phenotype’ – A case report from Asgar Ali Hospital." Pulse 15, no. 1 (January 15, 2024): 51–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/pulse.v15i1.70908.

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Bombay blood group is a rare blood type. It was first discovered in Bombay (Mumbai) in India. At the time of blood grouping, this blood group mimics O blood group due to the absence of H antigen, but it shows incompatibility with O group blood during cross-matching. Serum grouping or reverse grouping is essential for confirmation of the diagnosis. Patients carrying this blood group can receive blood only from a person with this blood group. Here, we present a case of Bombay phenotype in a patient with subarachnoid hemorrhage. Pulse Vol.15, 2023 P: 51-53
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Sharma, Dharmesh Chandra, Sunita Rai, Sachin Singhal, Prakriti Gupta, and Shailendra Sharma. "Para-Bombay B phenotype: a rare ABH blood group variant at tertiary care hospital, Gwalior India." Journal of Research in Clinical Medicine 9, no. 1 (May 14, 2021): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.34172/jrcm.2021.021.

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Background: The H antigen is the precursor substance for A and B antigens formation on red blood cells of an individual and absence of it is termed as H deficient phenotype. If H antigen is absent on both RBCs and secretions, and then the resulting blood group is a Classical Bombay phenotype with anti-H antibodies in their serum. If H antigen are absent on RBCs and present in secretions and plasma, the resulting blood group is Para-Bombay phenotype. Genetically Para-Bombay’s lack an active H gene (genotype is hh) but carry at least one Se gene (Secretor gene). Para-Bombay or red blood cell (RBC) H negative secretor individuals may or may not have anti-H in their serum. In both cases routine blood grouping is O. Case Report: Blood sample of 24-year-old female is submitting in blood bank, resulting her routine grouping O RhD positive. Complete blood grouping by Gel technology revels her forward grouping is Oh and reverse grouping B. Patient is secretor for B and H antigens. Absorption and elusion test is negative. Family grouping was also done to find out compatible blood and her family genesis. Conclusion: Patient blood group is Para-Bombay B. Complete blood grouping (Forward and reverse) as well as saliva grouping and absorption /elusion test is advisable when there is a discrepancy in ABH grouping.
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Chaitanya Kumar, IS, DS Jothi Bai, Anju Verma, and GeethaK Vani. "Prevalence of Bombay blood group in a tertiary care hospital, Andhra Pradesh, India." Asian Journal of Transfusion Science 5, no. 1 (2011): 57. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0973-6247.76006.

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5

Parikh, Chirag R., and Dilip R. Karnad. "Quality, cost, and outcome of intensive care in a public hospital in Bombay, India." Critical Care Medicine 27, no. 9 (September 1999): 1754–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003246-199909000-00009.

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6

Parikh, Chirag, and Dilip Karnad. "QUALITY, COST AND OUTCOME OF INTENSIVE CARE IN A PUBLIC HOSPITAL IN BOMBAY, INDIA." Critical Care Medicine 27, Supplement (January 1999): 36A. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003246-199901001-00033.

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7

Kura, Mahendra M., Subhash Hira, Malvika Kohli, Prathiba J. Dalal, V. K. Ramnani, and M. R. Jagtap. "High occurrence of HBV among STD clinic attenders in Bombay, India." International Journal of STD & AIDS 9, no. 4 (April 1, 1998): 231–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/0956462981921954.

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The pattern of sexually transmitted disease (STD) is the basis for designing surveillance of specific STD, their trends and syndromic management protocols. Two hundred and fifteen consecutive first-time STD clinic attenders at a teaching hospital in Bombay were recruited for the study in October 1995. Thorough clinical examination and the following investigations were done: wet mount, Gram stain, Giemsa stain, modified Thayer-Martin (MTM) medium culture, Fontana stain, Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL), Treponema pallidium haemagglutination test (TPHA), HBsAg and HIV. Ulcerative STD constituted 73.5% of total STD while 15.8% were discharges and 10.2% were genital growths. Ulcers in decreasing order of frequency were chancroid (51.9%), genital herpes (29.1%) and syphilis (14.5). 76.5% of genital discharges were due to gonococcal infection. The high rate of ulcerative STD is possibly an important co-factor for the high HIV prevalence of 31.2% in Bombay. Of 182 patients tested for HBV, 16 (8.8%) were reactive for HBsAg, revealing a high prevalence among STD attenders. A high co-relation of HBsAg positive with either HIV or VDRL requires urgent attention for HBV intervention strategies in this population.
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8

Bhagavathi, M. S., N. Das, S. Prakash, A. Sahu, S. Routray, and S. Mukherjee. "Blood group discrepancy in Ah para-Bombay phenotype: a rare blood group variant and its clinical significance." Immunohematology 37, no. 4 (January 1, 2021): 160–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.21307/immunohematology-2021-026.

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Abstract Individuals with the rare para-Bombay phenotype have inherited defects in producing H associated with FUT1 and/or FUT2 genes. We report a case of blood group discrepancy in a para-Bombay patient from a tertiary care hospital of eastern India. A 31-year-old woman with rheumatic heart disease presented with fatigue and breathlessness and was then scheduled for valvuloplasty, for which a blood transfusion request was sent to the blood center. During pre-transfusion testing, red blood cell (RBC) testing showed group O, and serum testing showed strong reactivity with group B RBCs, weak reactivity with group O RBCs, and very weak reactivity with group A RBCs. Saliva inhibition testing and enzyme treatment of RBCs concluded the patient to be of “Ah para-Bombay” phenotype. The patient’s Lewis phenotype was Le(a–b+). This patient’s serum also had cold-reacting anti-IH along with anti-B. This case report highlights the importance of performing an advanced immunohematologic workup, including adsorption, elution, enzyme treatment, and saliva inhibition testing for identification of weak A or B subgroups as well as the rare para-Bombay blood group, when routine ABO typing, using forward and reverse grouping, is inconclusive. Accurate identification of blood group helps in preventing transfusion-related adverse events and encouraging safe transfusion practice.
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9

Vaidya, Sucheta J., Suresh H. Advani, Suresh K. Pai, Chandrika N. Nair, Purna A. Kurkure, Tapan K. Saikia, R. Gopal, Vasant R. Pai, Kanchan S. Nadkarni, and Purvish M. Parikh. "Survival of Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Results of Therapy at Tata Memorial Hospital, Bombay, India." Leukemia & Lymphoma 20, no. 3-4 (January 1996): 311–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10428199609051623.

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10

Pandya, Sunil K. "Dr John McLennan MD (Aberdeen), FRCP (Lond) (1801–1874) and the Medical School of Bombay that failed." Journal of Medical Biography 27, no. 1 (April 6, 2017): 46–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967772017702762.

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In 1826, Dr John McLennan was asked by Governor Mounstuart Elphinstone of Bombay to set up the first school to teach modern medicine to Indian citizens. He was expected to create textbooks on a variety of subjects in local languages and teach medicine to poorly educated students in their native tongues. Despite his valiant efforts, the school was deemed a failure and was abolished by the Government in 1832. Sir Robert Grant, appointed Governor of Bombay in 1835, analysed records pertaining to this medical school and concluded that the school failed since Dr McLennan was not provided the assistance he needed and as his suggestions for access to a hospital to teach medicine were not heeded. Dr McLennan provided able support to Dr Charles Morehead on his appointment as Principal and Professor of Medicine at the newly created Grant Medical College in Bombay in 1845. Dr Morehead dedicated his classic ‘Clinical researches on diseases in India' to Dr McLennan. Dr McLennan headed the Board of Examiners created to assess the competence of the first batch of medical students emerging from this College. The system of evaluation set up by him remains admirable. Dr McLennan retired from service as Physician-General, full of honours.
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Dinshaw, K., S. Pande, S. Advani, G. Ramakrishnan, C. Nair, G. Talvalkar, D. N. Rao, P. Notani, R. Rao, and P. Desai. "Pediatric Hodgkin's disease in India." Journal of Clinical Oncology 3, no. 12 (December 1985): 1605–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.1985.3.12.1605.

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Twenty-one percent of all Hodgkin's disease in India was seen in the pediatric age groups at the Tata Memorial Hospital (Bombay, India). From 1975 to 1982, 151 cases of children were reviewed. The youngest presentation was at 3 years in three patients, with a marked male: female ratio of 5.5:1. Twenty-six patients were previously treated before referral while the remaining 125 cases were investigated and treated according to the prevalent protocols in 1975 to 1978 and 1979 to 1982. Clinical staging revealed 54% of patients in stages I and II with symptoms in 20%, and 46% of patients in stages III and IV with symptoms in 67%. Staging laparotomy was performed in 27 patients, with a total changes of staging in 17 children (63%). The mixed cell types (46%) and lymphocytic predominant types (31%) were the most common histologic presentations. Nine percent nodular sclerosis and 9% lymphocytic-depleted varieties were also observed. Five percent of all cases were not classifiable. Minimum adequate treatment was completed in 87 cases. Comparisons were made between the treatments administered to 40 patients during the initial period 1975 to 1978 when individualized treatment was administered, and the later 47 patients during the 1979 to 1982 period, when chemotherapy was the mainstay of treatment with involved field radiation.
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12

Patel, Vikram. "A view from the road: experiences in four continents." Psychiatric Bulletin 18, no. 8 (August 1994): 500–502. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.18.8.500.

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Since graduating from medical school eight years ago, I have had the chance of experiencing clinical psychiatry in four countries on four continents; Bombay and Goa, India, my home, where I trained in medicine and began my psychiatric training; Oxford and London, United Kingdom, where I acquired a taste for academic psychiatry and completed my clinical training; Sydney, Australia, where I worked in a liaison unit in a large general hospital and a community mental health centre; and now, Harare, Zimbabwe, where I am conducting a two year study on traditional concepts of mental illness and the role of traditional healers and other care providers in primary mental health care.
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13

BHARGAVA, ANURAG. "Saved by a syncretic faith? A case from 1995." Indian Journal of Medical Ethics 06, no. 03 (July 16, 2021): 251–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.20529/ijme.2021.017.

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Physicians in countries like India have to take on the care of seriously ill patients that, in a strict sense, maybe beyond their means to handle. They do so often because their patients trust them or the institutions that they may be a part of. The author reflects on his stint as a young physician in a rural medical college in Gujarat in the 1990s. He narrates the experience of dealing with a critically ill young man brought by road from a hospital in Bombay, 500 km away, to his hometown. The patient survived because the correct diagnosis was reached, and the family assisted in his intensive care with a remarkable composure which owed its origins to a faith crossing the boundaries of religion.
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14

Singh, Madhav Madhusudan, and Uma Shankar Garg. "Laws Applicable to Medical Practice and Hospitals in India." International Journal of Research Foundation of Hospital and Healthcare Administration 1, no. 1 (2013): 19–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10035-1004.

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ABSTRACT Healthcare in India features a universal healthcare care system run by the constituent states and territories. Law is an obligation on the part of society imposed by the competent authority, and noncompliance may lead to punishment in the form of monetary fine or imprisonment or both. The earliest known code of laws called the code of Hammurabi governed the various aspects of health practices including the fees payable to physician for satisfactory services. The first ever code of medical ethics called the Hippocratic oath was laid down 2500 years ago, in the 5th century BC, by Hippocrates'the Greek physician. The modern version of Hippocratic Oath (called the declaration of Geneva), devised by the WHO after the second world war and is accepted by international medical fraternity. The process of establishment of healthcare system during the colonial rule also necessitated creation of legislative framework for practitioners of medicine. As the number of doctors qualified in Indian medical colleges increased, creation of laws for them became necessary. The medical council of India, a national level statutory body for the doctors of modern medicine, was constituted after the enactment of Indian Medical Council Act 1933. The first legal recognition and registration for the Indian systems of medicine came when the Bombay Medical Practitioner’ Act was passed in 1938. Laws governing the commissioning of hospital are the laws to ensure that the hospital facilities are created after due process of registration, the facilities created are safe for the public using them, have at least the minimum essential infrastructure for the type and volume of workload anticipated and are subject to periodic inspections to ensure compliance. There are other laws pertaining to governing to the qualification/practice and conduct of professionals, sale, storage of drugs and safe medication, management of patients, environmental safety, employment and management of manpower, medicolegal aspects and laws pertaining to safety of patients, public and staff within the hospital premises. There are laws governing professional training and research, business aspects, licences/certifications required for hospitals, etc. A hospital administrator should be aware about all these laws, regulations, policies, procedures, reports and returns and keep abreast with the latest amendments to be on the safe side of law and provide quality care to the patients. How to cite this article Singh MM, Garg US, Arora P. Laws Applicable to Medical Practice and Hospitals in India. Int J Res Foundation Hosp Healthc Adm 2013;1(1):19-24.
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15

Merchant, M., D. R. Karnad, and A. A. Kanbur. "Incidence of nosocomial pneumonia in a medical intensive care unit and general medical ward patients in a public hospital in Bombay, India." Journal of Hospital Infection 39, no. 2 (June 1998): 143–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0195-6701(98)90328-0.

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16

Mishra, Debasish, Pankaj Parida, Smita Mahapatra, and Binay Bhusan Sahoo. "Resolving blood group discrepancy in patients of tertiary care centre in Odisha, India." International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences 6, no. 7 (June 25, 2018): 2348. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20182815.

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Background: Blood grouping consists of both forward grouping; reverse grouping and both procedures should agree with each other.A blood group discrepancy exists when results of red cell testing do not agree with serum testing, usually due to unexpected negative or positive results in either forward or reverse typing. ABO and Rh blood group discrepancy is associated with incompatible transfusion reaction.Blood group discrepancy should be resolved before transfusion and blood group to be properly labeled to prevent transfusion reaction.Methods: A prospective study was carried in SCB blood bank which is under the Department of Transfusion Medicine, SCB Medical College and Hospital, Cuttack, Odisha from January 2015 to October-2016. Total 25,559 blood samples of patients were included in the study and hemolysed samples excluded. The ABO and Rh D typing was done by tube technique using monoclonal IgM (Tulip Diagnostic P Ltd.) Anti-A, Anti-B, Anti-D and pooled A, B and O cell.Results: A total of 25,559 blood group testing were done where we found 57 blood group discrepancies with overall frequency was 0.22%. Out of 57 discrepancies we were found 20 (35.09%) cases of technical error and 37 (64.91%) cases of sample related error. Among these sample related problems, we found weak/missing antibody, weak antigen expression, rouleaux, cold autoantibodies, cold alloantibodies, Bombay phenotype with the frequency of 13.51%, 2.70%, 2.70%, 54.06%, 8.11%, 18.92% respectively.Conclusions: Mistyping either a donor or a recipient can lead to transfusion with ABO-incompatible blood, which can result in severe hemolysis and may even result in the death of the recipient. Any discrepancy between forward and reverse blood grouping methods should be resolved before transfusion of blood components.
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Rao, Chandrika, and Jayaprakash Shetty. "FREQUENCY OF ABO AND RHESUS (D) BLOOD GROUPS IN DAKSHINA KANNADA DISTRICT OF KARNATAKA - A STUDY FROM RURAL TERTIARY CARE TEACHING HOSPITAL IN SOUTH INDIA." Journal of Health and Allied Sciences NU 04, no. 03 (September 2014): 057–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0040-1703802.

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Abstract Background: ABO and Rh blood groups are most important blood groups in human beings. The frequency of four main blood group systems varies in population throughout the world and even in different parts of country. Objective if this study was to identify distribution of ABO and Rh blood group system. Materials and methods: The study was conducted in rural tertiary care hospital from January 2008 to December 2012. Data were collected from Blood Bank grouping records. All blood samples processed during period of observation were included in study. Results: During the period of observation total 43,103 numbers of blood groups were performed. Patient's samples were 28,305 and donor's samples were 14,798. The frequency of blood group O in our population was 42.0% (40.1% O Rh positive and 1.8% O Rh negative). The frequency of blood group B in our population was 27.3% (25.6% B Rh positive and 1.62% B Rh negative) followed by blood group A was 25.8% (24.3% A Rh positive and 1.4% A Rh negative) and blood group AB was 4.8% (4.4% AB Rh positive and 1.4% AB Rh negative) and a two Bombay blood group donors (0.0046%). Rh positive were 94.64% and Rh negative were 5.35%. Discussion: O positive blood group is significantly high in our population. Every transfusion centre should have a record of frequency of blood group system in their population. It helps in inventory management. Knowledge of blood group distribution is important for clinical studies, for reliable geographical information and for forensic studies in the population.
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Singh, Abhay. "Undetermined blood loss due to accidental injury and its management in a male patient of classical Bombay (Oh) phenotype in a hospital in the remote part of east India." Asian Journal of Transfusion Science 9, no. 1 (2015): 104. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0973-6247.150973.

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19

Kumar, T. C. Anand, C. P. Puri, K. Gopalkrishnan, I. N. Hinduja, Stephen L. Corson, Frances R. Batzer, Benjamin Gocial, and Joel Bernstein. "The in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVF-ET) and gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT) program at the Institute for Research in Reproduction (ICMR) and the King Edward Memorial Hospital, Parel, Bombay, India." Journal of In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Transfer 5, no. 6 (December 1988): 376–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01129575.

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20

Tanna, Dilip D., and Ashok Shyam. "Dr DD Tanna – Story of a Legend." Trauma International 1, no. 1 (2015): 3–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.13107/ti.2015.v01i01.002.

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This interview was conducted at the famous Lotus Clinic at Mumbai. Interview of Dr DD Tanna (DDT) was personally conducted by our Editor Dr Ashok Shyam (AK). It was an interesting two hours talk in late evening and we are presenting here the salient features of the interview. AK: First let me thank you for this interview. Let’s begin by asking about your family and where you grew up? DDT: I grew up in Kalbadevi area in Bombay in a typical Gujrati locality. I had four brothers so we were five of us together with my father and mother. At that time education was not something very popular in our family and when I graduated I was among the handful in 2 mile radius and when I completed post-graduation there were none in the entire area. The trend was that people used to go to college just for the stamp of collage and then join the father business. But I was a good student and so I did complete my studies AK: Tell us something more about your childhood? DDT: I had a very eventful childhood, we used to play many sports. I was very good at cricket and even at medical college I was captain of the cricket team. But along with cricket I played many local sports kho-kho, langadi, hoo-to-too, football, volleyball, swimming etc. Didn’t get chance to play hockey but I did play everything I came across. AK: I understand you have seen Mahatma Gandhi and heard him speak. Please share your remembrance of that? DDT: Once Gandhiji was holding a meeting in Bombay and my father said to me ”let’s go see Gandhiji”. I went with him and there was a huge crowd and I felt quite uncomfortable. I wanted to leave when my father said to me ‘why are you afraid of the crowd, these are all your fellow human beings, not cattle herd”. That statement touched me very much and till today, I am not afraid of any crowd. Understanding that all are my fellow human beings, took away my stage fright forever. I can speak my thoughts clearly and without fear and I can dance with the crowd with equal ease. I have seen Mahatma Gandhi at close distance and he appeared to be a very frail man. At first I wasn’t impressed, but then I realised that this frail man can have the huge crowd following him just because of his thought process. That understanding has helped me a lot in my life. AK: So why did you become a doctor, what was your inspiration? DDT: I was good in studies and in those days there were only two choices either to be an engineer or to be a doctor. I had decided that I would be an engineer with no doubt in my mind. One day one of my uncles, who happened to be an engineer, visited us. When asked I told him my intention to become an engineer, to which he replied ”In that case you have to take up a government job all your life”. In those days the only scope for an engineer was to be in government job, but the idea of being a enslaved for life by an organisation was something I couldn’t accept. My freedom was very dear to me and overnight I changed my decision and pledged to become a doctor. AK: How was your MBBS term? Why did you choose orthopaedic surgery? DDT: I was quite casual in MBBS and was more involved in sports. I got serious in last year to get good grades. Frankly speaking there were none who influenced me in the undergraduate college. After joining medicine developed a natural liking to surgery and always wanted to become a surgeon. Doing general surgery and then super specialisation for another two years seemed to be a long time. Orthopaedic surgery was a new branch at that time and offered direct super specialisation. And so I joined orthopaedic surgery. AK: What were your early influences in medical college? DDT: I wasn’t a very serious student in medical college. Possibly I became a bit serious in my last year of MBBS to score marks to get the branch of my choice. After MBBS and before joining post-graduation I had some spare time at hand which I utilise in reading. That period was a period of change I my life. I read authors like Bertrand Russel who had a major influence in my life. I read ‘Altas shrugged’, ‘We the Living’, and ‘Fountainhead’ and these three books had deep impact on me. I also read The Manusmrti’s specifically for their philosophical treatise and not the religious aspect. I still like to ponder on these philosophical aspects from time to time. By the time I joined as an orthopaedic registrar, I was a pretty serious person. In first 6 months of my orthopaedic residence I was fascinated with basics specially the histopathological aspect of orthopaedics. I read all about the histiocytes, the fibroblasts etc and even today I still think in these terms when I think about orthopaedics. AK: You joined the B Y L Nair Hospital, Mumbai in 1965. Tell us something about your life at Nair Hospital? DDT: Well in fact I passed my MS in 1965. I joined possibly in 1954 as a medical student. I was a student, house surgeon, lecturer, honorary surgeon all at Nair hospital. I was one of the youngest consultant as I became consultant at Nair hospital at age of 28, merely 8 months after passing MS exams. Possibly God was kind to me. Nair hospital was a decent place, but it became a force once Dr KV Chaubal joined Nair. Earlier KEM hospital had big name because of Dr Talwalkar and Dr Dholakia. I was lecturer when Dr Chaubal joined. He changed Nair hospital with his modern and dynamic approach. He gave me an individual unit within 3 years. Our rounds would be more than 4 hours in Nair hospital and had great academic discussions. AK: We have heard about a very famous incident when you operated Dr Chaubal? Do tell us something about that DDT: Well Dr Chaubal was suffering from a prolapsed disc and he had taken conservative management for some time with recurrent episodes. At one point we went ahead and got a myelogram done (no MRI in those days), and a huge disc was diagnosed. He called me the next day and asked to operate on him. I was 10 years his junior and moreover he was my boss and there were many more senior surgeons who were available. It came as a shock to me that he would chose me to operate on him [and of course it was an honor to be chosen]. Dr Laud and Dr Pradhan assisted me in operating him and it was big news at that time AK: You were pioneer in bringing C-arm to India? Tell us something about the C-arm Story? DDT: We used to do all surgeries under X ray guidance in those days, at the most we had 2 x-rays set together by Dr Talwalkar to get orthogonal views. I used to go to USA and they would do all surgeries under C-arm. I came back and contacted Mr Kantilal Gada who used to manufacture X ray machines. He agreed to try to make a C arm if I pay him one lakh rupees [in those days]. The condition was if he succeeded, he would give the c arm to me at no profit rate and if he failed my money would be lost. He did succeed and we had India’s first C-arm at my place. It helped me at many times in clinical practice. One specific incidence about an Arab patient who had a failed implant removal surgery previously and Icould remove the implant within 30 mins because I could clearly see the distal end of the nail entrapped. This patient was a friend of The Consulate General of UAE and since then I started getting lot of patients from there. So that was a wise investment I think. AK: You were specifically instrumental in developing trauma surgery in India. Why focus of Trauma Surgery? DDT: Dr Chaubal the first person to start trends in everything. At first we were spine surgeons as Dr Chaubal was very interested in spine surgery. Dr Bhojraj and Dr VT Ingalhalikar were our students. I was one of the first people to do total hip and total knee surgeries very soon after Dr Dholakia did it for the first time in India. But somehow I felt these surgeries did not hold much challenge. Trauma surgeries were challenging and each case was unique and different. So I decided to stick to trauma surgery for the sake of sheer joy of intellectual and technical challenges it offers. AK: A lot has happened in the field of Orthopaedic Trauma in and you are witness to these growth and development. What according to you are the important landmarks in History of trauma Surgery? DDT: Interlocking is the major change. I used to go to AAOS meeting every year where people were talking about interlocking when we were doing only plates. I decided to make an interlock nail by drilling holes in standard K nail. There was no C-arm in those days and surgeries were done on X rays. We got a compound fracture tibia and I made a set of drilled K nails for this patient as per his measurements. We successfully did the static locking using K nail in this patient. We slowly developed the instrumentation and jigs for it and developed commercially available instrument nail. Interlocking spread like wild fire and I was called as the Father of Interlocking Nail in India. AK: Your specific focus was on Intramedullary nailing and you have also designed the ‘Tanna Nail’ How did you think of designing the nail? Tell us about the process of designing the nail, the story behind it? DDT: Like said above, I developed the nail and instrument set with one Mr Daftari in Bombay. This was sold as ‘Tanna nail’ in Bombay. Slowly implant companies from other states also copied the design and started selling it as ‘Tanna NAIL’. I had no objections to it and I didn’t have a copyright anyway. Slowly I phased away the name as the design progressed and asked them to call it simply interlocking nails. AK: You are known for Innovation. Tell us something more about it? DDT: I specifically remember C-arm guided biopsy which I used successfully for tumor lesions. The same principle I used for drilling osteoid osteoma under CT guidance, which avoided an open surgery. There are many more technical tips and surgical techniques that I have been doing and some of them are listed in my book named ‘Orthopaedic Tit Bits’ AK: The last two decades have seen a tremendous increase in the choices of implants available in the market. Many of these implants were sold as the next “new thing”. Do you feel these new implants offer justifiable and definite advantage over the older ones? How should a trauma surgeon go about this maze of implants and choose the best for his patients? DDT: There is no easy way to do that, because most implants comes with a huge propaganda and body of relevant research. Many senior faculties will start talking about it and using it. For example, distal femur plates have now reported to have 30% non-union rate. Earlier I had myself been a strong supporter of distal femur plate but through my own experience I saw the complications. Now I feel the intramedullary nail is better than the distal femur plat in indicated fractures. Same with trochanteric plates or helical screws in proximal femur fracture. So we learn the hard facts over a period of time and by burning our own hands. But then you have to be progressive and balance your scepticism and enthusiasm. In my case the enthusiasm wins most of the time. AK: Share your views on role of Industry in dictating terms to trauma surgeons? DDT: I feel it’s very difficult to bypass the industry. Also because the industry is supported by orthopods. But again like I said we learn from our own errors and something that does not have substance will not last for long. For example clavicle plating, I supported clavicle plating for some time [and it felt correct at that time], but now I do not find wisdom in plating clavicle and so I have stopped. So I believe it’s a process of constant learning and also realising and accepting mistakes. Once I was a great proponent of posterolateral interbody fusion (PLIF) in spine but after few years of using it I realised the fallacy and I presented a paper in WIROC (Western India regional orthopaedic conference) titled ‘I am retracting PLIF’ and it was highly appreciated by the audience. AK: Tell us about your move toward joint replacement surgeries? DDT: I was one of the first one after Dr Dholakia to start joint replacement surgeries in India and I continue to do many joint surgeries. And of course ‘cream’ comes from joint replacement surgeries (laughs heartily) AK: You have been active in teaching and training for over 4 decades, how has the scene changes in terms of teaching methods and quality of surgeons undergoing training? DDT: Teaching is now become more and more spoon feeding and I think it is not real teaching. Even in meetings I enjoy the format where there is small number of faculty and case based discussion on practical tips and surgical technique. The 8 minute talk pattern is something I think is not very effective. Real teaching of orthopaedics cannot be done in classroom or in clinics. In clinics we can teach students to pass exams but not orthopaedics. Dr Chaubal always used to say that real orthopaedics is taught in practical patient management and in operation theatres. I tell my fellows that I wont teach much, but they have to observe and learn. In medical colleges there is no teaching at all, its almost died off. AK: What you feel is the ‘Way of Working’ of Dr Tanna that makes him a successful Orthopaedic Surgeon? Your Mantra? DDT: Always do academically correct things. Like I have been practicing 3 doses of antibiotics since last 20 years. I read a lot and then distil the academic points and follow them in practice. I get up at 4 am and read everyday. AK: What technical tips would you give for someone who has just embarked on his career as an Orthopaedic surgeon? DDT : I have given one oration which is also on you tube, you should listen to that. Anybody who becomes an orthopaedic surgeon is actually cream of humanity and are capable of doing anything. The only thing required is a strong will to excel and passion to succeed AK: I understand that you are a very positive person, but do you have any regrets, specifically related to orthopaedics. Something that you wished to do but couldn’t? DDT: Honestly nothing. Today when people ask me ‘How are you’ I say ‘can’t be better’. I couldn’t have asked for a better life AK: Any message you will like to share? DDT: I think passion to be best is essential. Even if one patient does not do well or if we do a mistake in a surgery, it causes huge distress and misery to us. We as doctor should be truthful to your patients. Between you and your patient there can’t be any malpractice. You should treat every patient as if you are doing it on your son or daughter. Always keep patient first AK: What degree or accolades would you like me to mention in your introduction? DDT: Nothing just plain MS Orth, I have no other degrees. In fact after my MS I attempted to give D orth exam. My boss at that time Dr Sant, said ‘are you crazy, after passing MS you want to give KG exam?’ He actually did not allow me to appear (laughs). Never felt like having any more degrees, degrees won’t take me ahead, its only my orthopaedic skill that will be take me ahead in life.
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21

Singh, Om, L. Venkateswara Rao, Amitabh Gaur, Niyam C. Sharma, Anis Alam, and Gursaran P. Talwar. "Antibody response and characteristics of antibodies in women immunized with three contraceptive vaccines inducing antibodies against human chorionic gonadotropin**This study was conducted in five institutions with the clinical collaboration of the following physicians: Alok K. Banerjee M.D., National Institute of Health & Family Welfare, New Delhi; Kamala Dhall, M.D., Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh; Vera Hingorani, M.D., All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi; Usha R. Krishna, M.D., Seth G. S. Medical College & K.E.M. Hospital, Bombay; Shanti M. Shahani, M.D., T. N. Medical College & Nair Hospital, Bombay; and Badri N. Saxena, M.D., Indian Council of Medical Research, New Delhi.††Supported by grants from the S & T Mission Project of the Department of Biotechnology, Government of India, the International Development Research Centre of Canada and the Rockefeller Foundation, and benefited from cooperative interaction with the International Committee for Contraception Research of the Population Council, New York." Fertility and Sterility 52, no. 5 (November 1989): 739–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)61024-5.

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22

"Second International Conference Surgery in the Tropics 22–27 February 1987 Bombay Hospital Institute of Medical Sciences Bombay, India." Annals of Vascular Surgery 1, no. 2 (October 1986): 181. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02754381.

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23

Shenoy, Konchady Deepthi Suresh, and Kirana Pailoor. "The Prevalence of ABO, Rh and Bombay Blood Group among Donors at a Tertiary Care Hospital in Mangalore, India." NATIONAL JOURNAL OF LABORATORY MEDICINE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7860/njlm/2022/50620.2564.

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Introduction: Blood types were first discovered by an Austrian physician, Karl Landsteiner. He found that blood sera from different persons would clump together (agglutinate) when mixed in test tubes, and some human blood also agglutinated with animal blood. The study of different blood groups is important as it has major role in blood transfusion, certain medico-legal cases especially disputed paternity etc. Aim: This study was carried out to find the prevalence of ABO, Rhesus (Rh) and Bombay blood group among donors at a tertiary care hospital. Materials and Methods: The present retrospective study was done at a tertiary care hospital of Mangalore, Dakshina Kannada district, Karnataka, India from June 2018 to May 2019 with data analysis done in November 2019. Data of 8,254 blood donors were collected and analysed regarding ABO, Rhesus and Bombay group from June 2018 to May 2019. Blood grouping was done by automated method using agglutination technique. The data collected was analysed by frequency and percentage. Results: The total donors studied were 8,254 with mean age of 48 years. The most common blood group was O (n=3178,38.5%) followed by B (n=2343, 28.38), A (n=2102, 25.47%), AB (n=629, 7.62%) and Bombay (n=2, 0.02%), respectively. Rh positivity among donors were 94% (n=7762). Rest were Rh negative and were found to be approx. 6% (n=490). Conclusion: The most common blood group among donors was O Rh positive and the least common was Bombay blood group. Every blood bank should have a record of frequency of ABO and Rh grouping as it is important for its effective management. Safe transfusion reduces the risk of transfusion transmitted illnesses and thus promotes patient safety
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"The Seth GS Medical College and King Edward Memorial Hospital, Bombay, India, Platinum Jubilee." Anaesthesia 55, no. 12 (December 2000): 1238–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2044.2000.01863-3.x.

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25

Smith, Robert D. "Emerging infrastructures: the politics of radium and the validation of radiotherapy in India’s first tertiary cancer hospital." BioSocieties, March 5, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41292-020-00223-3.

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AbstractThis article traces the history of India’s first tertiary cancer hospital, Tata Memorial Hospital (TMH). TMH was originally conceived in 1932 as a philanthropic project by the Tatas, an elite Parsi business family in Bombay. The founding of TMH represented a form of philanthro-capitalism which both enabled the Tatas to foster a communal acceptance for big businesses in Bombay and provide the Tatas with the opportunity to place stakes in the emerging nuclear research economy seen as essential to the scientific nationalist sentiment of the post-colonial state. In doing this, the everyday activities of TMH placed a heavy emphasis on nuclear research. In a time when radium for the treatment of cancer was still seen as ‘quackery’ in much of the world, the philanthro-capitalist investment and the interest in nuclear research by the post-colonial state provided an environment where radium medicine was able to be validated. The validation of radiotherapy at TMH influenced how other cancer hospitals in India developed and also provided significant resources for cancer research in early-mid twentieth century India. Ultimately, this article identifies ways in which cancer comes to be seen as relevant in the global south and raises questions on the relationship between local and global actors in setting health priorities.
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"First person – Ambuja Navalkar." Journal of Cell Science 135, no. 15 (August 1, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.260459.

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ABSTRACT First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Journal of Cell Science, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Ambuja Navalkar is first author on ‘ Oncogenic gain of function due to p53 amyloids occurs through aberrant alteration of cell cycle and proliferation’, published in JCS. Ambuja conducted the research described in this article while a postdoctoral fellow in Professor Samir K. Maji's lab at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, India. She is now a postdoctoral research associate in the lab of Professor Tanja Mittag at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USA, investigating the role of biomolecular condensation in transcription factor assembly and activity in the context of cancer.
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Lehler, Raul, Antonio Picazo, Sarah Blackmon, Deborah Asplaugh, Ronald Fielder, Dennie Johnson, and Subburaj Kannan. "Genesis of Antibiotic Resistance XXIV: Impediments in Implementation of Antibiotic Time Out (ATO) To Mitigate Antibiotic Resistance Pandemic (ARP): A Sniffle for Inclusive Approach." FASEB Journal 31, S1 (April 2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.31.1_supplement.777.5.

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Mitigating an impending ARP is a vanguard objective for the global medical community. Although standard core elements such as leadership commitment, accountability, drug expertise, action and treatment with ATO considerations, tracking and monitoring antibiotic prescription and resistance patterns, reporting, education with the aim of educating clinicians about resistance and optimal prescription have been indexed in hospital and nursing home antibiotic stewardship programs, such a scenario in developing countries such as India is far from reality either in the government hospitals or private medical facilities. According to the data, India as a nation lacks a coordinated scheme to address the issues for successful implementation of ATO to mitigate ARP. Comparative analysis of data published by the World Health Organization and The Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy relating to public health in developed and in developing countries reveals statistical connotations and exposes disparities that require immediate improvement. Drainage and flood control structures and protocols, along with wastewater and hazardous material contamination directives and procedures must be developed to ensure abatement of acute contamination and mitigation of chronic forms of pollution such as the foam formation due to mixing of untreated waste water with lake water in Bangalore, India, or the sporadic and periodic flooding which delay cleaning efforts in Madras, India, and de‐escalation of smog and fog formation due ineffective solid waste reclamation practices in Bombay, India. Implemented practice must also endeavor to halt heat assimilation that increases mutagenic potential that is attributed to rapid urbanization. Of grave concern in developing countries is the absence of a central coordinating bodies that are akin to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that monitor and analyze morbidity and mortality rates attributed to AR pathogen induced infectious disease. These coordinating bodies would greatly contribute to the adequate implementation of Absolute Risk Reduction (ARR) by antibiotic prophylaxis in surgical care, proscription of Colistin in patient care while monitoring the use in animal growth promotion and disease control in caged animal operations (CAO), and the implementation of evidence based and documented diagnoses by the physician in private practice and prescription of antibiotics in the retail sector. Further assistance from coordinating bodies would bolster physician efforts to be un‐yielding to patient pressure and demand. Coordinating bodies would monitor the periodic per capita consumption of antibiotics, uniquely important post‐influenza would be collect and analyzed. There must exist a necessity for mandatory continuing medical education (CME) activity that addresses AR for physicians to continue prescribing antibiotics, and studies that correlate of animal protein consumption versus the incidence of AR pathogen induced infectious disease. Emphasis must also be given to the prompt withdrawal of Ab causing toxicity and resistance from the market, and centralized data base established that compiles detection data for API (active pharmaceutical ingredients of Ab) in soil and water. The synergistic accumulation of derogatory factors constitutes a demand for a coordinated and timely global effort to address the disparaging elements and authentic concerns prior to implementing ATO for mitigating ARP in developing countries. Data analysis to be presented in EB2017.Support or Funding InformationProfessional development funds to Subburaj Kannan
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