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Institution

Max Healthcare

HealthcareNew Delhi, India
About: Max Healthcare is a healthcare organization based out in New Delhi, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 391 authors who have published 410 publications receiving 14404 citations.
Topics: Population, Medicine, Cancer, MEDLINE, Health care


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There seems to be an association of aberrant markers with L1 and L2 morphology in T-ALL, however, this needs to be tested for statistical significance on a larger sample size.
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Aberrant expression of immunophenotypic markers is commonly found in patients of acute leukemia. T-ALL also shows aberrant markers such as CD13, CD33, CD117, CD10, and CD79a. Morphologically, T-ALL has been categorized into L1, L2, and L3 subtypes. Till now, no study has been done to correlate these markers with morphological features of T-ALL. This study aimed to correlate the expression of aberrant immunophenotypic markers with morphology in T-ALL. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All the cases of T-ALL diagnosed by flow cytometry over a period of 2½ year were taken out from the records of Hematology Section of Department of Pathology of University College of Medical Science and Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital and Max Hospital, Saket. Their peripheral blood smear was screened to correlate the morphology of blasts with the expression of aberrant markers. RESULTS: A total of 40 cases of T-ALL were identified during 2½ year period of our study. Morphological correlation was available for 23 cases. Aberrant expression of CD10 was present in 6 (35.3%) cases, CD79a in 9 (47.36%) cases, CD117 in 5 (42.28%) cases and myeloid antigen CD33 in 5 (38.46%) cases. CD117 and CD33-positive cases showed L2 morphology with the presence of convolutions, while cases with expression of CD79a had L1 morphology with absent-slight convolutions. CD10-positive cases had L1/L2 morphology with absent occasionally present convolutions. CONCLUSIONS: There seems to be an association of aberrant markers with L1 and L2 morphology. However, this needs to be tested for statistical significance on a larger sample size.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
13 May 2021-Cureus
TL;DR: A rare case of lambda-restricted crystal-storing histiocytosis (CSH) of the stomach was reported in this paper, where the patient was later diagnosed to have diffuse large B-cell lymphoma involving lymph nodes and bone marrow.
Abstract: Crystal-storing histiocytosis (CSH) is a rare tissue phenomenon that is usually associated with lympho-proliferative diseases. The disease is characterized by prominent collections of macrophages with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and fibrillary cytoplasmic inclusions. The inclusions appear as linear crystals within the macrophages which are usually kappa restricted. The disease usually involves lungs, lymph nodes, bone marrow, thymus and spleen with rare involvement of the gastrointestinal tract. We report a rare case of lambda-restricted CSH of the stomach. The diagnosis of CSH triggered further hematological evaluation. The patient was later diagnosed to have diffuse large B-cell lymphoma involving lymph nodes and bone marrow. He received chemotherapy for the same and is on regular follow up. The index case highlights the need to identify CSH of stomach prompting evaluation for hematological malignancies and to increase its awareness among clinicians and pathologists.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A world first case of acanthomatous ameloblastoma which was crossing the midline is presented, due to its rarity and lack of data.
Abstract: Ameloblastoma is the most common aggressive benign odontogenic tumor of the jaws. Ameloblastoma is a benign epithelial odontogenic tumor that typically arises in the mandible or maxilla or, rarely, in the immediate adjacent soft tissues. A clinical, radiographic and histopathological report is presented of a case of acanthomatous ameloblastoma in relation to molar in the left mandible of a 30-year-old healthy male. The histopathological examination of the removed specimen revealed the histopathological pattern of an acanthomatous ameloblastoma. The radiographic appearance of the lesion showed the presence of multilocular radiolucencies, which were crossing the midline, which is rarely found in ameloblastoma. Due to its rarity and lack of data, we take this opportunity to present a world first case of acanthomatous ameloblastoma which was crossing the midline.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Expert oncologist discussed on the mode of treatment to extend the OS and improve the quality of life ofHER2-positivebreast cancer patients with Solitary brain metastases.
Abstract: Breast cancer is a common cause of brain metastases, with metastases occurring in at least 10-16% of patients. Longer survival of patients with metastatic breast cancer and the use of better imaging techniques are associated with an increased incidence of brain metastases. Current therapies include surgery, whole-brain radiation therapy, stereotactic radiosurgery, chemotherapy and targeted therapies. However, the timing and appropriate use of these therapies is controversial and careful patient selection by using available prognostic tools is extremely important. Expert oncologist discussed on the mode of treatment to extend the OS and improve the quality of life ofHER2-positivebreast cancer patients with Solitary brain metastases. This expert group used data from published literature, practical experience and opinion of a large group of academic oncologists to arrive at this practical consensus recommendations for the benefit of community oncologists.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Abhaya Indrayan1
TL;DR: This article highlights aleatory and epistemic uncertainties and shows with the help of an example how apparently valid and reliable findings can completely derail due to these uncertainties.
Abstract: Aleatory uncertainties are generated by intrinsic factors such as studying a sample rather than the whole population and the source of epistemic uncertainties is extraneous such as limitations of knowledge. These uncertainties inflict all the findings in empirical medical research, but they are rarely appreciated. This article highlights these uncertainties and shows with the help of an example how apparently valid and reliable findings can completely derail due to these uncertainties. We conclude that aleatory and epistemic uncertainties should get due consideration while drawing conclusions and before the results are put into practice. Methods to reduce their impact on results are also presented.

2 citations


Authors

Showing all 396 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pradeep Chowbey291184176
Kewal K. Talwar291733502
Anil Sharma24961840
Manish Baijal24801760
Rajesh Khullar24891792
Kaushal Madan23692934
Joseph L. Mathew222242721
Ramandeep Singh Arora22831943
Deepak Bansal222642061
Divya Agarwal221982020
Vandana Soni22731384
Deven Juneja1765959
Rahul Naithani17106882
Nishkarsh Gupta172071045
Abhaya Indrayan16991530
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20234
20223
202178
202070
201944
201843