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Meera Vaswani

Researcher at All India Institute of Medical Sciences

Publications -  20
Citations -  779

Meera Vaswani is an academic researcher from All India Institute of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Alcohol dependence. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 16 publications receiving 722 citations.

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Role of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in psychiatric disorders: a comprehensive review.

TL;DR: Although no clear relationship exists between the clinical efficacy, plasma concentration of SSRIs, nor any threshold that defines toxic concentrations, therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) may be useful in special populations, such as in elderly patients, poor metabolizers (PM) of sparteine or mephenytoin (CYP2C19), and patients with liver and kidney impairment.
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Dopamine D2 receptor polymorphisms and susceptibility to alcohol dependence in Indian males: a preliminary study

TL;DR: The study provides preliminary insight into genetic risk to alcohol dependence in Indian males and two polymorphisms namely, -141C Ins/Del and TaqI A in DRD2 gene may have clinical implications among Indian alcoholic subjects.
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Urinary excretion of minerals, oxalate, and uric acid in north Indian children

TL;DR: The dietary intake of proteins, calcium, and other nutrients in these children was less than recommended and explained the reduced urinary excretion observed and Physicians need to be aware of the regional patterns of normal urinary excretions of these constituents.
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Association of ADHIB and ALDH2 gene polymorphisms with alcohol dependence: A pilot study from India

TL;DR: The highlight of the study findings was the uniquely high frequency of the ALDH2*2/*2 genotype (among alcohol-dependent subjects) being a risk-conferring factor for alcohol dependence.
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Case–control association analysis of Dopamine receptor polymorphisms in alcohol dependence: a pilot study in Indian males

TL;DR: It is shown that genetic variations in dopamine receptors D1 and D4 may influence genetic predisposition to alcoholism, and statistically significant associations of polymorphisms in DRD1 and DRD4 with alcoholism were found.