P
Pankaj Kumar Singh
Researcher at All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Publications - 100
Citations - 861
Pankaj Kumar Singh is an academic researcher from All India Institute of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trauma center & Myelopathy. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 100 publications receiving 638 citations. Previous affiliations of Pankaj Kumar Singh include King George's Medical University & AIIMS, New Delhi.
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Pathophysiological mechanisms in acute pancreatitis: Current understanding
TL;DR: The role of inflammatory markers and immune system activation is an area of much relevance from the point of view of finding a target for therapeutic intervention and the current understanding in this area is highlighted.
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Pediatric intracranial aneurysms—our experience and review of literature
Kanwaljeet Garg,Pankaj Kumar Singh,Bhawani Shankar Sharma,Poodipedi Sarat Chandra,Ashish Suri,Manmohanjit Singh,Raghavan Kumar,Shashank Sarad Kale,Nalin Kumar Mishra,Shailesh K Gaikwad,Ashok Kumar Mahapatra +10 more
TL;DR: Pediatric intracranial aneurysms are uncommon as compared to in adult patients, and seizures and cranial nerve involvement are seen more often as the presenting features in children.
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Analysis of changing paradigms of management in 179 patients with spinal tuberculosis over a 12-year period and proposal of a new management algorithm.
Sarat P Chandra,Ajit Singh,Nishant Goyal,Rajender K. Laythalling,Manmohan Singh,Sharad S. Kale,Manish Sharma,Ashish Suri,Pankaj Kumar Singh,Ajay Garg,Chitra Sarkar,Manjari Tripathi,Bhawani Shankar Sharma,Ashok Kumar Mahapatra +13 more
TL;DR: Medical treatment of spinal TB is the mainstay; however, radical, instrumented surgeries should be offered when indicated, and the presence of paraplegia should not preclude surgery.
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Surgical considerations for 'intrinsic' brainstem gliomas: proposal of a modification in classification.
TL;DR: The surgical management of intrinsic brain stem tumors presents a surgical challenge; radical excision yielded a good outcome in the majority of cases and the authors propose a classification system for 'intrinsic' brainstem tumors for defining surgical strategy.
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Traumatic spondyloptosis: a series of 20 patients.
Akash Mishra,Deepak Agrawal,Deepak Gupta,Sumit Sinha,Guru Dutta Satyarthee,Pankaj Kumar Singh +5 more
TL;DR: Despite deformity correction of the spine and early mobilization of patients, traumatic spondyloptosis led to high morbidity and mortality rates because the patients lacked access to rehabilitation facilities postoperatively.