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Nusrat Jahan
Researcher at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
Publications - 252
Citations - 3132
Nusrat Jahan is an academic researcher from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 173 publications receiving 2127 citations. Previous affiliations of Nusrat Jahan include Kyushu Institute of Technology & Khulna University.
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Preliminary Phytochemical Screening, Quantitative Analysis of Alkaloids, and Antioxidant Activity of Crude Plant Extracts from Ephedra intermedia Indigenous to Balochistan
TL;DR: The HPLC method was useful for the quantitative purpose of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine used for 45 samples of one species collected from central habitat in three districts of Balochistan to prove its uses in Pakistani folk medicines for the treatment of asthma and bronchitis.
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Health Care Disparities Among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Youth: A Literature Review.
TL;DR: The main objective of this literature review is to highlight the challenges faced by the LGBT youth and to enhance the awareness among physicians about the existing disparities in order to provide a more comprehensive, evidence-based, and humane medical care to this community.
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Administration of misoprostol by trained traditional birth attendants to prevent postpartum haemorrhage in homebirths in Pakistan: a randomised placebo-controlled trial.
N Mobeen,Jill Durocher,Nadeem F. Zuberi,Nusrat Jahan,Jennifer Blum,S Wasim,Gijs Walraven,Gijs Walraven,J Hatcher +8 more
TL;DR: Administration of misoprostol by trained traditional birth attendants to prevent postpartum haemorrhage in homebirths in Pakistan is found to be safe and effective in a randomised placebo‐controlled trial.
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How to Conduct a Systematic Review: A Narrative Literature Review.
TL;DR: A narrative review of the literature about systematic reviews is conducted and the essential elements of a systematic review along with the limitations of such a review are outlined.
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Molecular characterization of insulin‐like peptide genes and their expression in the African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae
TL;DR: Two AgamILPs were ubiquitously expressed, suggesting a growth factor function, whereas the other Agam ILPs were expressed primarily in heads, as confirmed by the immunostaining of ILPs in the neurosecretory cells of female brains, thus indicating a hormonal function.