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Chandana Haldar

Researcher at Banaras Hindu University

Publications -  174
Citations -  2312

Chandana Haldar is an academic researcher from Banaras Hindu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Melatonin & Pineal gland. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 161 publications receiving 1964 citations. Previous affiliations of Chandana Haldar include Semmelweis University.

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Journal Article

Daily variation in melatonin level, antioxidant activity and general immune response of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and lymphoid tissues of Indian goat Capra hircus during summer and winter.

TL;DR: The data presented strong positive correlation between high levels of nighttime melatonin levels and immune parameters during winter suggests that melatonin possesses immunoenhacing as well as antioxidative property during winter.
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Melatonin Ameliorates LPS-Induced Testicular Nitro-oxidative Stress (iNOS/TNFα) and Inflammation (NF-kB/COX-2) via Modulation of SIRT-1

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of melatonin on LPS-induced testicular nitro-oxidative stress, inflammation, and associated damages in male golden hamsters, Mesocricetus auratus.
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Melatonin alleviates hyperthyroidism induced oxidative stress and neuronal cell death in hippocampus of aged female golden hamster, Mesocricetus auratus.

TL;DR: It is indicated that melatonin reduced the hyperthyroidism-induced oxidative stress and neuronal cell death in the hippocampus region of brain, suggesting a novel therapeutic approach of melatonin for management of cognition and memory function in females underhyperthyroid condition.
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Environmental factors and annual harderian-pineal-gonadal interrelationship in indian jungle bush quail, perdicula asiatica

TL;DR: Investigation of the annual changes in weight and secretory activity for the pineal gland, Harderian gland, and ovary in jungle bush quail, a bird indigenous to the tropics in India, suggests that there is an inverse relationship between pineal glands activity and ovarian and Harderians gland activities.
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Reciprocal interaction between melatonin receptors (Mel1a, Mel1b, and Mel1c) and androgen receptor (AR) expression in immunoregulation of a seasonally breeding bird, Perdicula asiatica: Role of photoperiod

TL;DR: Photoperiodically modulated level of melatonin via reciprocal regulation of Mel1a, Mel1b, and Mel1c, and AR in spleen as well as in testis modulates immunity, suggesting a compensatory mechanism between reproduction and immunity in a seasonally breeding bird, P. asiatica.