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Nagendra Kumar Kaushik

Researcher at Kwangwoon University

Publications -  131
Citations -  4146

Nagendra Kumar Kaushik is an academic researcher from Kwangwoon University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 86 publications receiving 2893 citations. Previous affiliations of Nagendra Kumar Kaushik include University of Delhi.

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Biomedical Importance of Indoles

TL;DR: Some of the relevant and recent achievements in the biological, chemical and pharmacological activity of important indole derivatives in the areas of drug discovery and analysis are covered.
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Biological and medical applications of plasma-activated media, water and solutions

TL;DR: PAM is discussed as an anti-cancer, anti-metastatic, antimicrobial, regenerative medicine for blood coagulation and even as a dental treatment agent, and the role of PAM on cancer initiation cells, on the epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT), and when used for metastasis inhibition considering its anticancer effects.
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Nanosecond-Pulsed DBD Plasma-Generated Reactive Oxygen Species Trigger Immunogenic Cell Death in A549 Lung Carcinoma Cells through Intracellular Oxidative Stress

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that plasma triggers immunogenic cell death through oxidative stress pathways and highlights its potential development for cancer immunotherapy.
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T-2 mycotoxin: toxicological effects and decontamination strategies.

TL;DR: The prospects of the trichothecene as potential hazardous agents, decontamination strategies and future perspectives along with plausible therapeutic uses are comprehensively described.
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Responses of Solid Tumor Cells in DMEM to Reactive Oxygen Species Generated by Non-Thermal Plasma and Chemically Induced ROS Systems

TL;DR: The authors' data revealed that plasma decreased the viability and intracellular ATP values of cells and increased the apoptotic population via a caspase activation mechanism and radicals generated by specific chemical systems enhanced cell death drastically in cancer as well as normal cell lines in a dose-dependent fashion.