P
Prakash Poudel
Researcher at B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences
Publications - 52
Citations - 509
Prakash Poudel is an academic researcher from B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Epilepsy. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 39 publications receiving 352 citations.
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Journal Article
Clinical profile and outcome of children presenting with poisoning or intoxication: a hospital based study.
Sunil Budhathoki,Prakash Poudel,Dheeraj Shah,Nisha Keshary Bhatta,A. K. Dutta,Gauri Shankar Shah,K. K. Bhurtyal,B Agrawal,MK Shrivastava,Manvandra Kumar Singh +9 more
TL;DR: In conclusion, organophosphorus is the commonest agent involved in childhood poisoning, and the outcome is good with 87.4% survival in the authors' hospital.
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Clinical, etiological and antimicrobial susceptibility profile of pediatric urinary tract infections in a tertiary care hospital of Nepal.
TL;DR: High-level antimicrobial resistance was observed in pediatric UTI with alarming incidence superbugs like MDR, XDR, ESBL and MRSA and regular surveillance should be carried out to guide the proper management of children.
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Electrocardiographic and enzymatic correlations with outcome in neonates with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
TL;DR: Abnormal ECG and cardiac enzymes levels are found in HIE and can lead to poor outcome due to myocardial damage Early detection can help in better management and survival of these neonates.
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The Functional, Social and Economic Impact of Acute Encephalitis Syndrome in Nepal – a Longitudinal Follow-Up Study
Michael J. Griffiths,Jennifer Lemon,Ajit Rayamajhi,Ajit Rayamajhi,Ajit Rayamajhi,Prakash Poudel,Pramina Shrestha,Vijay Srivastav,Rachel Kneen,Rachel Kneen,Antonieta Medina-Lara,Singh Rr,Singh Rr,Tom Solomon,Tom Solomon +14 more
TL;DR: A need for long-term medical support following Acute Encephalitis Syndrome is highlighted, especially since only supportive treatment is available, and Rationalisation of initial expensive hospital treatments may be warranted.
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Randomized Control Trial of Kangaroo Mother Care in Low Birth Weight Babies at a Tertiary Level Hospital
TL;DR: LBW babies less than 2000 gm who receive Kangaroo Mother Care show better weight gain and have less incidence of hypothermia than those who do not receive KMC.