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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38765964

ABSTRACT

Similar to other animals, the fly, Drosophila melanogaster, reduces its responsiveness to tastants with repeated exposure, a phenomenon called gustatory habituation. Previous studies have focused on the circuit basis of gustatory habituation in the fly chemosensory system1,2. However, gustatory neurons reduce their firing rate during repeated stimulation3, suggesting that cell-autonomous mechanisms also contribute to habituation. Here, we used deep learning-based pose estimation and optogenetic stimulation to demonstrate that continuous activation of sweet taste neurons causes gustatory habituation in flies. We conducted a transgenic RNAi screen to identify genes involved in this process and found that knocking down Histamine-gated chloride channel subunit 1 (HisCl1) in the sweet taste neurons significantly reduced gustatory habituation. Anatomical analysis showed that HisCl1 is expressed in the sweet taste neurons of various chemosensory organs. Using single sensilla electrophysiology, we showed that sweet taste neurons reduced their firing rate with prolonged exposure to sucrose. Knocking down HisCl1 in sweet taste neurons suppressed gustatory habituation by reducing the spike frequency adaptation observed in these neurons during high-concentration sucrose stimulation. Finally, we showed that flies lacking HisCl1 in sweet taste neurons increased their consumption of high-concentration sucrose solution at their first meal bout compared to control flies. Together, our results demonstrate that HisCl1 tunes spike frequency adaptation in sweet taste neurons and contributes to gustatory habituation and food intake regulation in flies. Since HisCl1 is highly conserved across many dipteran and hymenopteran species, our findings open a new direction in studying insect gustatory habituation.

2.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg ; 240: 108260, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38564992

ABSTRACT

A 63-year-old man with type 2 diabetes mellitus, alcohol consumption in moderation, and three episodes of hepatic encephalopathy presented with symmetrical lower limb distal weakness, sensory ataxia, thickened palpable nerves, mood disturbances for seven years, and a family history of schizophreniform disorders. Nerve conduction studies showed demyelinating sensorimotor polyradiculoneuropathy. CSF analysis showed mild albumino-cytological dissociation. MRI brain and lumbosacral plexus showed thickened fifth cranial nerves and lumbosacral roots. He was treated with steroids for a provisional diagnosis of chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy and became encephalopathic. EEG showed triphasic waves. Serum ammonia was 201 micrograms/dL. Further evaluation suggested ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency. The patient underwent hemodialysis with a low protein diet, rifaximin, and sodium benzoate, with subsequent recovery.


Subject(s)
Neural Conduction , Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase Deficiency Disease , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase Deficiency Disease/complications , Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase Deficiency Disease/diagnosis , Neural Conduction/physiology , Ataxia , Polyneuropathies/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Electroencephalography , Hepatic Encephalopathy/diagnosis , Renal Dialysis
3.
BMC Emerg Med ; 23(1): 111, 2023 09 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37735359

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: One significant cause of morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing endotracheal intubation is the aspiration of gastric contents. Its prevalence is more in the emergency than in elective settings. Point-of-care gastric ultrasound (GUS) is a non-invasive bedside ultrasonogram that provides both qualitative and quantitative information about the stomach contents. The diagnostic accuracy of GUS in terms of gastric parameters (measured antral diameters, antral cross-sectional area, and calculated gastric volume) to predict aspiration is yet unknown. We aim to determine this in the patients undergoing urgent emergency intubation (UEI) in the emergency department. METHODOLOGY: A prospective observational study was conducted at the emergency department of a tertiary healthcare center in India. Patients requiring UEI were identified and a bedside gastric ultrasound was done in the right lateral decubitus position using low frequency curved array probe. The qualitative data and the antral diameters (anteroposterior and craniocaudal) were assessed. The patient's clinical parameters and history regarding the last meal were noted. The cross-sectional area of gastric antrum was calculated using CSA = (AP × CC) π/4. The gastric volume is estimated using Perla's formula: GV = 27.0 + 14.6(RLD CSA) -1.28(age). RESULTS: A hundred patients requiring urgent endotracheal intubation were enrolled in the study. Visible aspiration was more in participants with a distended gastric status (χ2 = 16.880, p = < 0.001). The median gastric volume in the patients who aspirated was 146.37 mL, and it ranged from 111.59 mL-201.01 mL. Using ROC analysis, a cut-off of CC diameter ≥ 2.35 cm (sensitivity 88%, specificity 91%) and AP diameter ≥ 5.15 cm (sensitivity 88%, specificity 87%) predicts aspiration. A calculated USG CSA cut-off ≥ 9.27cm2 (sensitivity 100%, specificity 87%) and an USG gastric volume ≥ 111.594 mL (sensitivity 100%, a specificity 92%) predicts aspiration. CONCLUSION: Point-of-care gastric ultrasound is an useful non-invasive bedside tool for risk stratification for aspiration in busy emergency rooms. We present threshold gastric antral parameters that can be used to predict aspiration along with its diagnostic accuracy. This can help the treating ED physician take adequate precautions, decide on intubation techniques and treatment modifications to aid in better patient management.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine , Point-of-Care Systems , Humans , Intubation, Intratracheal , Data Accuracy , Emergency Service, Hospital
4.
Int J Emerg Med ; 16(1): 18, 2023 Mar 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36899297

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Blood gas analysis is integral to assessing emergency department (ED) patients with acute respiratory or metabolic disease. Arterial blood gas (ABG) is the gold standard for oxygenation, ventilation, and acid-base status but is painful to obtain. Peripheral venous blood gas (VBG) is a valuable alternative as it is less painful and easy to collect. The comparability of ABG and VBG was studied in various conditions. But in hypotension, previous findings were inconsistent. So, we studied the correlation and agreement between ABG and VBG in hypotensive patients. METHODOLOGY: The study was conducted at the emergency department of a tertiary healthcare center in Northern India. Patients with hypotension above 18 years who satisfied the inclusion criteria were clinically evaluated. Patients who require ABG as a part of routine care were sampled. ABG was collected from the radial artery. VBG was obtained from the cubital or dorsal hand veins. Both samples were collected within 10 min and were analyzed. All ABG and VBG variables were entered in premade proforma. The patient was then treated and disposed of according to institutional protocol. RESULTS: A total of 250 patients were enrolled. The mean age was 53.25 ± 15.71 years. 56.8% were male. The study included 45.6% septic, 34.4% hypovolemic, 18% cardiogenic, and 2% obstructive shock patients. The study found a strong correlation and agreement for ABG and VBG pH, pCO2, HCO3, lactate, sodium, potassium, chloride, ionized calcium, blood urea nitrogen, base excess, and arterial/alveolar oxygen ratio. Hence, regression equations were made for the aforementioned. There was no correlation observed between ABG and VBG pO2 and SpO2. Our study concluded that VBG could be a reasonable alternative for ABG in hypotensive patients. We can also mathematically predict values of ABG from VBG using regression equations derived. CONCLUSIONS: ABG sampling causes most unpleasant experiences to patients and is associated with complications like arterial injury, thrombosis, air or clotted-blood embolism, arterial occlusion, hematoma, aneurysm formation, and reflex sympathetic dystrophy. The study has shown strong correlations and agreements for most ABG and VBG parameters and can predict ABG mathematically using regression formulas formulated from VBG. This will decrease needle stick injury, consume less time, and make blood gas evaluation easy in hypotensive settings.

5.
Ann Indian Acad Neurol ; 25(4): 640-646, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36211192

ABSTRACT

Introduction: In India, a national program for stroke (national programme for the control of cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancer, and stroke) and stroke management guidelines exist. Its successful implementation would need an organized system of stroke care in practice. However, many challenges exist including lack of awareness, prehospital notification systems, stroke ready hospitals, infrastructural weaknesses, and rehabilitation. We present here a protocol to investigate the feasibility and fidelity of implementing a uniform stroke care pathway in medical colleges of India. Methods and Analysis: This is a multicentric, prospective, multiphase, mixed-method, quasi-experimental implementation study intended to examine the changes in a select set of stroke care-related indicators over time within the sites exposed to the same implementation strategy. We shall conduct process evaluation of the implementation process as well as evaluate the effect of the implementation strategy using the interrupted time series design. During implementation phase, education and training about standard stroke care pathway will be provided to all stakeholders of implementing sites. Patient-level outcomes in the form of modified Rankin Scale score will be collected for all consecutive patients throughout the study. Process evaluation outcomes will be collected and reported in the form of various stroke care indicators. We will report level and trend changes in various indicators during the three study phases. Discussion: Acute stroke requires timely detection, management, and secondary prevention. Implementation of the uniform stroke care pathway is a unique opportunity to promote the requirements of homogenous stroke care in medical colleges of India.

8.
J Emerg Med ; 57(5): 710-712, 2019 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31492590

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cardiac myxoma is the most common primary benign tumor of the heart and it has diverse clinical presentations. It is known to embolize into systemic circulation. However, presentation with complete occlusion of the aorta is uncommon. CASE REPORT: We report an 18-year-old female who presented to the emergency department with features of acute bilateral limb ischemia. Arterial Doppler ultrasonography showed infrarenal aortic occlusion. A bedside cardiac ultrasound was done in the emergency department which clinched the diagnosis of atrial myxoma. Complete surgical excision of the tumor and subsequent histopathologic examination confirmed the diagnosis of atrial myxoma. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: This report puts emphasis on the fact that atrial myxoma, though rare, may be considered as a source of embolism in patients presenting with acute limb ischemia. The importance of bedside ultrasonography for early diagnosis in such presentations is also highlighted.


Subject(s)
Lower Extremity/blood supply , Myxoma/complications , Myxoma/diagnosis , Adolescent , Echocardiography/methods , Female , Humans , Lower Extremity/innervation , Muscle Weakness/etiology , Myxoma/surgery , Pain/etiology
9.
J Emerg Trauma Shock ; 11(1): 61-64, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29628673

ABSTRACT

INDUSEM was established as an INDO-US Satellite Knowledge Network in 2005. It brought together the academic leaders and innovators from India and the US with the goal of creating collaborative synergies and creative solutions to advance the knowledge and science of emergency medicine (EM) in India. Since 2005, the leadership of INDUSEM devoted substantial resources, effort, and expertise to ensure that newly implemented clinical institutes and training programs have the necessary resources and logistical support to effectively advance EM and Traumatology Sciences in India. As a result, significant synergies and progress were achieved toward establishing EM training programs and building clinical infrastructure through education, grant funding, research, skills development, bidirectional collaborations, and sustained influence on public health policy development. As INDUSEM's mission matures, its efforts will increasingly focus on creating long-term sustainability across clinical, didactic, educational, outreach, health policy, and research domains. In this joint statement, the authors describe the evolution of INDUSEM's institution of INDO-US Summit into the World Academic Congress of EM , with the parallel inception of an India-centric academic enterprise, EMINDIA.

10.
Int J Crit Illn Inj Sci ; 7(2): 79-83, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28660160

ABSTRACT

There have been multiple incidents where doctors have been assaulted by patient relatives and hospital facilities have been vandalized. This has led to mass agitations by Physicians across India. Violence and vandalism against health-care workers (HCWs) is one of the biggest public health and patient care challenge in India. The sheer intensity of emotional hijack and the stress levels in both practicing HCWs and patient relative's needs immediate and detail attention. The suffering of HCWs who are hurt, the damage to hospital facilities and the reactionary agitation which affects patients who need care are all together doing everything to damage the delivery of health care and relationship between a doctor and a patient. This is detrimental to India where illnesses and Injuries continue to be the biggest challenge to its growth curve. The expert group set by The Academic College of Emergency Experts and The Academy of Family Physicians of India makes an effort to study this Public Health and Patient Care Challenge and provide recommendations to solve it.

11.
Indian J Exp Biol ; 54(6): 365-9, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27468462

ABSTRACT

Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors therapy is aassociated with bothersome dry cough as an adverse effect. The mechanisms underlying this adverse effect are not clear. Therefore, influence of captopril (an ACE inhibitor) on acetylcholine (ACh)-induced bronchial smooth muscle contractions was investigated. Further, the mechanisms underlying the captopril-induced changes were also explored. In vitro contractions of rat bronchial smooth muscle to cumulative concentrations of ACh were recorded before and after exposure to captopril. Further, the involvement of kinin and inositol triphosphate (IP3) pathways for captopril-induced alterations were explored. ACh produced concentration-dependent (5-500 µM) increase in bronchial smooth muscle contractions. Pre-treatment with captopril augmented the ACh-induced contractions at each concentration significantly. Pre-treatment with aprotinin (kinin synthesis inhibitor) or heparin (inositol triphosphate, IP3-inhibitor), blocked the captopril-induced augmentation of bronchial smooth muscle contractions evoked by ACh. Further, captopril-induced augmentation was absent in calcium-free medium. These results suggest that captopril sensitizes bronchial smooth muscles to ACh-induced contractions. This sensitization may be responsible for dry cough associated with captopril therapy.


Subject(s)
Acetylcholine/adverse effects , Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors/adverse effects , Bronchi/drug effects , Captopril/adverse effects , Muscle Contraction/drug effects , Muscle, Smooth/drug effects , Animals , Bronchial Spasm/chemically induced , Cough/chemically induced , Drug Synergism , Kinins/metabolism , Male , Rats
12.
Indian J Crit Care Med ; 20(12): 719-723, 2016 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28149030

ABSTRACT

Sympathetic crashing acute pulmonary edema (SCAPE) is the extreme end of the spectrum of acute pulmonary edema. It is important to understand this disease as it is relatively common in the emergency department (ED) and has better outcomes when managed appropriately. The patients have an abrupt redistribution of fluid in the lungs, and when treated promptly and effectively, these patients will rapidly recover. Noninvasive ventilation and intravenous nitrates are the mainstay of treatment which should be started within minutes of the patient's arrival to the ED. Use of morphine and intravenous loop diuretics, although popular, has poor scientific evidence.

13.
J Family Med Prim Care ; 3(4): 440-2, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25657961

ABSTRACT

Hypoglycemia is a common presenting feature of diabetes in the emergency department. Cardiovascular and neuroglycopenia features are well documented in the literature. We here report a case of 55-year-old female who came to our emergency with clinical features suggestive of cerebellar stroke. Laboratory investigations revealed severe hypoglycemia. The cerebellar signs and symptoms improved completely with intravenous dextrose infusion. Her MR imaging and Doppler of carotid and vertebrobasilar arteries were noncontributory. Hypoglycemia causes behavioral changes, confusion, loss of consciousness, and seizures. It is also well known to cause hemiplegia and aphasia. Hypoglycemia presenting as cerebellar stroke is rarely reported in the literature. This case highlights an uncommon manifestation of a common clinical condition. Physician must rule out hypoglycemia in every stroke patients.

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