N
Nidhi Agarwal
Researcher at All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Publications - 7
Citations - 488
Nidhi Agarwal is an academic researcher from All India Institute of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Heart disease. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 451 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiac disease in pregnancy
TL;DR: Surgical correction of the cardiac lesion prior to pregnancy was associated with better pregnancy outcome and patients inNYHA class I/II had a better maternal and fetal outcome than those in NYHA class III/IV.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiac disease in pregnancy.
TL;DR: Patients inNYHA class I/II had a better maternal and fetal outcome than those in NYHA class III/IV and Surgical correction of the cardiac lesion prior to pregnancy was associated with better pregnancy outcome.
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Comparison of Human Neonatal and Adult Blood Leukocyte Subset Composition Phenotypes
Savit Prabhu,Deepak K. Rathore,Deepa Nair,Anita Chaudhary,Saimah Raza,Parna Kanodia,Shailaja Sopory,Anna George,Satyajit Rath,Vineeta Bal,Reva Tripathi,Siddharth Ramji,Aruna Batra,K C Aggarwal,Harish Chellani,Sugandha Arya,Nidhi Agarwal,Umesh Mehta,Uma Chandra Mouli Natchu,Nitya Wadhwa,Shinjini Bhatnagar +20 more
TL;DR: The human peripheral leukocyte subset composition depends on genotype variation and pre-natal and post-natal environmental influence diversity, and some subsets were more dispersed in adults than in neonates suggesting influences of postnatal sources of variation.
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Seroprevalence of Molluscum contagiosum virus in German and UK populations.
Subuhi Sherwani,Laura Farleigh,Nidhi Agarwal,Samantha Loveless,Neil Robertson,Eva Hadaschik,Paul Schnitzler,Joachim Jakob Bugert +7 more
TL;DR: The first large scale serological survey of MC in Europe and the first MCV ELISA based on viral antigen expressed in E. coli are reported, finding German seroprevalences determined in the MC084 ELISA are at least three times higher than incidence in a comparable Swiss population.
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Underweight full-term Indian neonates show differences in umbilical cord blood leukocyte phenotype: a cross-sectional study.
Deepak K. Rathore,Deepa Nair,Saimah Raza,Savita Saini,Reeta Singh,Amit Kumar,Reva Tripathi,Siddarth Ramji,Aruna Batra,K C Aggarwal,Harish Chellani,Sugandha Arya,Neerja Bhatla,Vinod K. Paul,R. Aggarwal,Nidhi Agarwal,Umesh Mehta,Shailaja Sopory,Uma Chandra Mouli Natchu,Shinjini Bhatnagar,Vineeta Bal,Satyajit Rath,Nitya Wadhwa +22 more
TL;DR: Differences in cellular lineages of the immune system possibly reflect stress responses in utero associated with growth restriction and increased susceptibility to infections may be linked to complex immune system dysregulation rather than simply retarded immune system maturation.