G
G. Vengatesh
Researcher at University of Madras
Publications - 9
Citations - 250
G. Vengatesh is an academic researcher from University of Madras. The author has contributed to research in topics: Glutathione peroxidase & Testosterone. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 214 citations. Previous affiliations of G. Vengatesh include University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Chronic chromium exposure-induced changes in testicular histoarchitecture are associated with oxidative stress: study in a non-human primate (Macaca radiata Geoffroy)
M. Michael Aruldhas,S. Subramanian,P. Sekar,G. Vengatesh,Gowri Chandrahasan,P. Govindarajulu,Mohammad Abdulkader Akbarsha +6 more
TL;DR: CrVI disrupts spermatogenesis by inducing free radical toxicity, and supplementation of antioxidant vitamins may be beneficial to the affected subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ameliorative effect of vitamin C on hexavalent chromium-induced delay in sexual maturation and oxidative stress in developing Wistar rat ovary and uterus.
Jawahar B. Samuel,Jone A. Stanley,Jone A. Stanley,G. Vengatesh,Rajendran A. Princess,Sridhar Muthusami,Dailiah P Roopha,Esakky Suthagar,Kathiresh M Kumar,Maria S. Sebastian,Michael M. Aruldhas +10 more
TL;DR: At the request of the Editor and the Publisher, the following article is retracted from Toxicology and Industrial Health due to redundant publication by the same group of authors in another journal.
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Lipid peroxidation and antioxidants status in human malignant and non-malignant thyroid tumours
Jone A. Stanley,Jone A. Stanley,R Neelamohan,E. Suthagar,G. Vengatesh,J Jayakumar,M. Chandrasekaran,Sakhila K. Banu,M. Michael Aruldhas +8 more
TL;DR: In the case of non-malignant thyroid tumours, the oxidant–antioxidant balance was undisturbed, whilst in malignant tumours the balance was altered, and the change in r value observed in the LPO and SOD pairs between normal and PTC tissues and also in many pairs with multi-nodular goitre (MNG)/toxic MNG tissues may be used as a marker to differentiate/detect different malignant/non- malignant
Journal ArticleDOI
Lactational hexavalent chromium exposure-induced oxidative stress in rat uterus is associated with delayed puberty and impaired gonadotropin levels.
Jawahar B. Samuel,Jone A. Stanley,Dailiah P Roopha,G. Vengatesh,J. Anbalagan,Sakhila K. Banu,Michael M. Aruldhas +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that lactational CrVI exposure induces oxidative stress in rat uterus by decreasing antioxidant enzymes, which were associated with delayed puberty and altered steroids and gonadotrophin levels.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mechanism underlying transient gestational-onset hypothyroidism-induced impairment of posttesticular sperm maturation in adult rats.
TL;DR: Transient gestational-onset hypothyroidism affects male fertility by impairing posttesticular sperm maturation process in the epididymis, owing to subnormal androgen bioavailability, AR expression, and AR functional activity.