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Mohammad Javed Ali

Researcher at L V Prasad Eye Institute

Publications -  398
Citations -  3716

Mohammad Javed Ali is an academic researcher from L V Prasad Eye Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nasolacrimal duct & Lacrimal sac. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 387 publications receiving 2812 citations.

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Primary canaliculitis: clinical features, microbiological profile, and management outcome.

TL;DR: Primary canaliculitis is predominantly a unilateral disease with a significant delay in diagnosis, with staphylococcus species emerging as the most common pathogen, and punctoplasty with canalicular curettage combined with topical antibiotic therapy is the gold standard treatment.
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Sebaceous gland carcinoma of the eyelid: clinicopathological features and outcome in Asian Indians.

TL;DR: Canthal involvement, larger tumor diameter, and perivascular invasion were poor prognostic factors in this study, and advanced eyelid SGC is a tumor associated with poor prognosis.
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Clinical profile and management outcome of acute dacryocystitis: two decades of experience in a tertiary eye care center.

TL;DR: A retrospective study of 347 eyes of 320 patients, who presented to the Ophthalmic Plastic Clinic of a tertiary eye care center over a period of 22 years from January 1990 to March 2012 with acute dacryocystitis, found Fistula formation is a sequel more commonly seen with spontaneous rupture of a lacrimal abscess.
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Establishing Human Lacrimal Gland Cultures with Secretory Function

TL;DR: The study reports the novel finding of establishing functionally competent human lacrimal gland cultures in-vitro and provides preliminary data on the presence of stem cells and duct-like cells in the fresh and in- vitro cultured human Lacrimal glands.
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Circumostial injection of mitomycin C (COS-MMC) in external and endoscopic dacryocystorhinostomy: efficacy, safety profile, and outcomes.

TL;DR: The technique appears to be promising for the success of cases with high risk of failures like revision DCR and traumatic secondary acquired nasolacrimal duct obstruction, and COS-MMC is a safe and effective adjunctive modality in DCR.