Institution
University of Rajasthan
Education•Jaipur, India•
About: University of Rajasthan is a education organization based out in Jaipur, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Chemical shift & Derivative (chemistry). The organization has 15058 authors who have published 15733 publications receiving 117400 citations. The organization is also known as: Rajasthan University.
Topics: Chemical shift, Derivative (chemistry), Porphyrin, Magnetic susceptibility, Magnetic anisotropy
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The most common cause of dystocia in cattle seems to be fetal maldispositions, of which limb flexion and head deviation appear to be the most frequent, and the management of the management from different causes in cattle and buffalo is provided.
Abstract: We review the causes of fetal dystocia in cows and buffalo. Two fetal causes are distinct fetal oversize and fetal abnormalities. Fetal oversize is common in heifers, cows of beef cattle breeds, prolonged gestations, increased calf birth weight, male calves and perinatal fetal death with resultant emphysema. Fetal abnormalities include monsters, fetal diseases and fetal maldispositions, and it is difficult to deliver such fetuses because of their altered shape. Although monsters are rare in cattle, a large number of monstrosities have been reported in river buffalo; yet also here, overall incidence is low. Diseases of the fetus resulting in dystocia include hydrocephalus, ascites, anasarca and hydrothorax. The most common cause of dystocia in cattle seems to be fetal maldispositions, of which limb flexion and head deviation appear to be the most frequent. We provide a brief description of the management of dystocia from different causes in cattle and buffalo. A case analysis of 192 and 112 dystocia in cattle and buffalo, respectively, at our referral center revealed that dystocia is significantly higher (P<0.05) in first and second parity cows and buffalo, and that dystocia of fetal origin is common in cows (65.62%) but less frequent (40.17%) in buffalo. In buffalo, the single biggest cause of dystocia was uterine torsion (53.57%). Fetal survival was significantly (P<0.05) higher both in cows and buffalo when delivery was completed within 12 h of second stage of labor.
62 citations
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Madan M. Aggarwal1, Zubayer Ahammed2, A. V. Alakhverdyants3, I. G. Alekseev +383 more•Institutions (50)
TL;DR: In this article, the contribution of B meson decays to non-photonic electrons, which are mainly produced by the semileptonic decays of heavy-flavor mesons, in p + p collisions at root s = 200 GeV has been measured using azimuthal correlations between nonphotonic electron and hadrons.
Abstract: The contribution of B meson decays to nonphotonic electrons, which are mainly produced by the semileptonic decays of heavy-flavor mesons, in p + p collisions at root s = 200 GeV has been measured using azimuthal correlations between nonphotonic electrons and hadrons. The extracted B decay contribution is approximately 50% at a transverse momentum of p(T) >= 5 GeV/c. These measurements constrain the nuclear modification factor for electrons from B and D meson decays. The result indicates that B meson production in heavy ion collisions is also suppressed at high p(T).
62 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors report measurements of the production of D mesons in Pb-Pb collisions at the centre-of-mass energy per nucleon-nucleon pair.
Abstract: We report measurements of the production of prompt D$^{0}$, D$^{+}$, D$^{*+}$ and D$_{s}^{+}$ mesons in Pb–Pb collisions at the centre-of-mass energy per nucleon-nucleon pair $ \sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=5.02 $ TeV, in the centrality classes 0–10%, 30–50% and 60–80%. The D-meson production yields are measured at mid-rapidity (|y| 8 GeV/c, while it is larger at lower p$_{T}$. The nuclear modification factors for strange and non-strange D mesons are also compared to theoretical models with different implementations of in-medium energy loss.
62 citations
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TL;DR: Observations indicate the radio- protective potential of Tinospora cordifolia root extract in testicular constituents against gamma irradiation in mice, and significantly ameliorated radiation induced elevation in lipid peroxidation and decline in glutathione concentration in testes.
Abstract: The primary objective of this investigation is to determine the deleterious effects of sub lethal gamma radiation on testes and their possible inhibition by Tinospora cordifolia extract (TCE). For this purpose, one group of male Swiss albino mice was exposed to 7.5 Gy gamma radiation to serve as the irradiated control, while the other group received TCE (75 mg/kg b. wt./day) orally for 5 consecutive days half an hr before irradiation to serve as experimental. Exposure of animals to 7.5 Gy gamma radiation resulted into significant decrease in body weight, tissue weight, testes- body weight ratio and tubular diameter up to 15 days of irradiation. Cent percent mortality was recorded by day 17th in irradiated control, whereas all animals survived in experimental group. TCE pretreatment rendered significant increase in body weight, tissue weight, testes- body weight ratio and tubular diameter at various intervals as compared to irradiated group. Radiation induced histological lesions in testicular architecture were observed more severe in irradiated control then the experimental. TCE administration before irradiation significantly ameliorated radiation induced elevation in lipid peroxidation and decline in glutathione concentration in testes. These observations indicate the radio- protective potential of Tinospora cordifolia root extract in testicular constituents against gamma irradiation in mice.
62 citations
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62 citations
Authors
Showing all 15080 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rakesh K. Jain | 200 | 1467 | 177727 |
J. Pluta | 120 | 659 | 52025 |
Sudhir Raniwala | 113 | 591 | 44168 |
Rashmi Raniwala | 113 | 579 | 44076 |
Sanjay Jain | 103 | 881 | 46880 |
Mirko Planinic | 94 | 467 | 31957 |
Manish Sharma | 82 | 1407 | 33361 |
Nikola Poljak | 78 | 393 | 20795 |
Hari M. Srivastava | 76 | 1126 | 42635 |
Radhey S. Gupta | 71 | 377 | 18078 |
Ashwani Kumar | 66 | 703 | 18099 |
Amit Kumar | 65 | 1618 | 19277 |
Rashmi Gupta | 52 | 428 | 50962 |
Allan R. Oseroff | 48 | 121 | 7029 |
Vinod K. Aswal | 46 | 556 | 9917 |