K
Kaushik Biswas
Researcher at Bose Institute
Publications - 31
Citations - 2625
Kaushik Biswas is an academic researcher from Bose Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Apoptosis & T cell. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 29 publications receiving 2360 citations. Previous affiliations of Kaushik Biswas include Central Food Technological Research Institute & Indian Institute of Chemical Biology.
Papers
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Journal Article
Turmeric and curcumin: Biological actions and medicinal applications
TL;DR: Safety evaluation studies indicate that both turmeric and curcumin are well tolerated at a very high dose without any toxic effects, and have the potential for the development of modern medicine for the treatment of various diseases.
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A novel antioxidant and antiapoptotic role of omeprazole to block gastric ulcer through scavenging of hydroxyl radical
Kaushik Biswas,Uday Bandyopadhyay,Ishita Chattopadhyay,Archana Varadaraj,Esahak Ali,Ranajit K. Banerjee +5 more
TL;DR: Omeprazole plays a significant role in gastroprotection by acting as a potent antioxidant and antiapoptotic molecule.
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Indomethacin inactivates gastric peroxidase to induce reactive-oxygen-mediated gastric mucosal injury and curcumin protects it by preventing peroxidase inactivation and scavenging reactive oxygen
TL;DR: It is suggested that curcumin protects gastric damage by efficient removal of H( 2)O(2) and H (2)O-derived ()OH by preventing peroxidase inactivation by indomethacin.
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Smoking and the pathogenesis of gastroduodenal ulcer--recent mechanistic update.
TL;DR: It is concluded that gastric mucosal integrity is maintained by an interplay of some aggressive and defensive factors controlling apoptotic cell death and cell proliferation and smoking potentiates ulcer by disturbing this balance.
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Clinical studies on the effect of Neem (Azadirachta indica) bark extract on gastric secretion and gastroduodenal ulcer.
Uday Bandyopadhyay,Kaushik Biswas,Arnab Sengupta,Puspa Moitra,Prodip Dutta,Dipankar Sarkar,Pratip Debnath,Chayan K. Ganguly,Ranajit K. Banerjee +8 more
TL;DR: Neem bark extract has therapeutic potential for controlling gastric hypersecretion and gastroesophageal and gastroduodenal ulcers and various blood parameters for organ toxicity after Neem treatment at the doses suggested remained more or less close to the normal values suggesting no significant adverse effects.