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result(s) for
"Caroline, D Deepa"
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Uncanny: A Whimsical Element in Neil Gaiman's Coraline
2021
All that is not conscious to the individual is considered to lie in the unconscious and may affect a person's thoughts and actions in day-to-day life without their knowledge. While the button eyes are the most obvious marker of her difference and monstrosity, there are other physical distortions that create uncanny and grotesque effect. When Coraline arrives in the other world, she instantly prepares her a \"huge, golden-brown roasted chicken, fried potatoes, tiny green peas\" that Coraline says \"was the best chicken that [she] had ever eaten\" (35). Like the witch in Hansel and Gretel, the Other Mother cleverly uses food (notably nutritious food, not candy) as a lure, and as a marker of maternal care and affection.
Journal Article
Rudolf Laban Techniques through Dramain a Language Class
2021
English Language Teaching not only meant rote learning, but they wanted to incorporate other soft skills while teaching English so that it would help their pace of learning a language, but teaching English and soft skills became more mundane and so a new creative method is needed to incorporate both English language skills, soft skills, and body language skills. Rudolf Laban had some collaboration with collage systems supported anatomical analysis letter codes, stick figures, music notes and foot tracks or word notes supported his students.IrmgardBarterieff the dance intellect, dancer, creator, expert, physiotherapist, therapist, healer and leading pioneer of dance therapist pursued a brand-new vision of potentialities for human movement and movement training. Laban techniques supported eight elements they are punch, slash, float, glide, press, flick, wring and dab IrmgardBarterieff has elaborated the movement in four categories -Body, effort, shape and space form and area from the eight basic elements of Laban Techniques which help the actor to explore in physical and emotion. Direction - Direct/ indirect Weight - Heavy/ Light Speed - Quick/ Sustain Flow - Bound/ Free The 8 elements which help in body language and speech are a few examples for the eight elements with characters Punch- Politician, Army sergeant, Bossy parent, Strict School Principal.
Journal Article
Drama in English Teaching through Communicative Approach
2021
English Language Teaching (ELT) teacher insist on some components of a 'Communicative Approach' and distinguish methods that comprehend the value of Drama in ELT. Drama can be delineated as a movement relating individuals in a social context and there is no uncertainty that dynamic correspondence in social circumstances includes different types of communication that go past language ability. Though the presence of drama based performance is not so authentic in present English Language Teaching based teaching, the application of drama oriented teaching definitely will attain the objectives of teaching learning process in a better manner. The objective of this research paper is primarily to depict the significance of the applications of Communicative Approach and secondarily enhancing teaching through Drama based techniques in an ELT classroom setting which augments the teaching learning process.
Journal Article
Spuriously High Prevalence of Prediabetes Diagnosed by HbA1c in Young Indians Partly Explained by Hematological Factors and Iron Deficiency Anemia
by
Lubree, Himangi G
,
Hardikar, Pallavi S
,
Raut, Deepa A
in
Adult
,
analysis
,
Anemia, Iron-Deficiency
2012
OBJECTIVE: To examine the influence of glycemic and nonglycemic parameters on HbA1c concentrations in young adults, the majority of whom had normal glucose tolerance. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We compared the diagnosis of normal glucose tolerance, prediabetes, and diabetes between a standard oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT; World Health Organization 2006 criteria) and HbA1c concentrations (American Diabetes Association [ADA] 2009 criteria) in 116 young adults (average age 21.6 years) from the Pune Children’s Study. We also studied the contribution of glycemic and nonglycemic determinants to HbA1c concentrations. RESULTS: The OGTT showed that 7.8% of participants were prediabetic and 2.6% were diabetic. By ADA HbA1c criteria, 23.3% were prediabetic and 2.6% were diabetic. The negative predictive value of HbA1c was 93% and the positive predictive value was 20% (only 20% had prediabetes or diabetes according to the OGTT; this figure was 7% in anemic participants). Of participants, 34% were anemic, 37% were iron deficient (ferritin <15 ng/mL), 40% were vitamin B12 deficient (<150 pmol/L), and 22% were folate deficient (<7 nmol/L). On multiple linear regression analysis, HbA1c was predicted by higher 2-h glucose (R2 = 25.6%) and lower hemoglobin (R2 = 7.7%). When hematological parameters were replaced by ferritin, vitamin B12, and folate, HbA1c was predicted by higher glycemia (R2 = 25.6%) and lower ferritin (R2 = 4.3%). CONCLUSIONS: The use of HbA1c to diagnose prediabetes and diabetes in iron-deficient populations may lead to a spuriously exaggerated prevalence. Further investigation is required before using HbA1c as a screening tool in nutritionally compromised populations.
Journal Article
A physiological dose of oral vitamin B-12 improves hematological, biochemical-metabolic indices and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient Indian adolescent women
by
Behere, Rishikesh V.
,
Bhat, Dattatray S.
,
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
in
Administration, Oral
,
Adolescent
,
Adolescents
2019
Vitamin B-12 deficiency is often considered synonymous with pernicious anemia, a rare condition in which severe malabsorption of the vitamin requires high-dose parenteral treatment. In developing countries such as India, inadequate dietary intake of B-12 due to socio-cultural factors leads to widely prevalent asymptomatic low B-12 status. In this scenario, lower doses of oral B-12 may be effective, safer and more affordable.
To examine the effects of oral B-12 treatment at physiological doses on hematological and biochemical indices and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient rural Indian adolescent women.
Thirty-nine women with B-12 deficiency who were excluded from a community based B-12 supplementation trial (Pune Rural Intervention in Young Adolescents (PRIYA)) received oral B-12 2μg/day, either alone (n = 19) or with multiple micronutrients (UNIMAPP formula + 20gm milk powder, n = 20) for 11 months. Hematological indices, nutrients (B-12, folate), metabolites (homocysteine) and peripheral nerve function (SUDOSCAN, Impetomedical, Paris and sensory nerve conduction velocity (NCV) of median and sural nerves) were assessed at baseline and after 11 months of B-12 treatment.
Results were similar in the two treatment allocation groups, which were therefore combined. At baseline, all women had B-12 concentration <100pmol/L, 79% were anemic and 33% had macrocytosis, but none had neuropathy. After 11 months of treatment, B-12 levels increased, while folate did not change. The prevalence of anemia fell to 59% and mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and plasma homocysteine concentrations decreased. Sudomotor nerve function in the feet improved by an average of 14.7%, and sensory conduction velocity in median and sural nerves increased by 16.2% and 29.4% respectively.
We document clinically beneficial effects of supplementation with a physiological dose of oral B-12 in asymptomatic rural Indian adolescent women with very low B-12 status. These findings support a public health approach to tackle the widely prevalent low B-12 status in young Indians.
Journal Article
Preclinical Left Ventricular Diastolic Dysfunction in Metabolic Syndrome
by
Colucci, Wilson S.
,
Mooney, Deirdre M.
,
Downing, Jill
in
Adult
,
Body mass index
,
Cardiovascular
2014
Metabolic syndrome (MS) is commonly associated with left ventricular (LV) diastolic dysfunction and LV hypertrophy. We sought to examine whether preclinical LV diastolic dysfunction can occur independent of LV hypertrophy in MS. We recruited 90 consecutive participants with MS and without cardiovascular disease (mean age 46 years, 78% women) and 26 controls (no risk factors for MS; mean age 43 years, 65% women). Participants underwent echocardiography with tissue Doppler imaging. In age- and gender-adjusted analyses, MS was associated with higher left atrial (LA) diameter, higher LV mass, lower E/A ratio, and lower mean e′ (p <0.001 for all). These associations remained significant after further adjusting for blood pressure, antihypertensive medication use, and body mass index. After adjusting for LV mass, MS remained independently associated with higher LA diameter, lower E/A ratio, and lower mean e′ (p ≤0.01 for all). Specifically, subjects with MS had a 1.8 cm/s lower mean e′ compared with controls (p = 0.01). Notably, differences in mean e′ between those with and without MS were more pronounced at younger ages (p for interaction = 0.003). In conclusion, MS was associated with preclinical LV diastolic dysfunction independent of LV mass, as reflected by higher LA diameter, lower E/A ratio, and lower mean e′. This suggests that MS can lead to the development of diastolic dysfunction through mechanisms independent of hypertrophy. Differences in diastolic function were more pronounced at younger ages, highlighting the potential importance of early risk factor modification and preventive strategies in MS.
Journal Article
Assessment of Environmental, Sociocultural, and Physiological Influences on Women’s Toileting Decisions and Behaviors Using “Where I Go”: Pilot Study of a Mobile App
2025
Little is known about women's decisions around toileting for urination and how those decisions influence moment-to-moment behaviors to manage bladder needs. The new smartphone app \"Where I Go\" captures such nuanced and granular data in real-world environments.
This study aims to describe participant engagement with \"Where I Go\", variation in novel parameters collected, and readiness for the data collection tool's use in population-based studies.
\"Where I Go\" has three components: (1) real-time data, (2) short look-back periods (3-4 h), and (3) event location (GPS recorded at each interaction). The sample size was 44 women. Recording of real-time toileting events and responding to look-back questions was measured over 2 days of data collection. The participant's self-entered location descriptions and the automatic GPS recordings were compared.
A total of 44 women with an average age of 44 (range 21-85) years interacted with the app. Real-time reporting of at least 1 toileting event per day was high (38/44, 86%, on day 1 and 40/44, 91%, on day 2) with a median of 5 (IQR 3-7 on day 1 and IQR 3-8 on day 2) toileting events recorded each day. Toileting most commonly occurred at home (85/140, 61%, on day 1 and 129/171, 75%, on day 2) due to a need to go (114/140, 66%, on day 1 and 153/171, 74%, on day 2). The most common reasons for delaying toileting were \"work duties\" (33/140, 21%, on day 1 and 21/171, 11%, on day 2) and \"errands or traveling\" (19/140, 12%, on day 1 and 19/171, 10%, on day 2). Response to at least 1 look-back notification was similarly high (41/44, 93%, on day 1 and 42/44, 95%, on day 2), with number of responses higher on average on day 2 compared with day 1 (mean on day 1=3.2, 95% CI 3.0-3.5; mean on day 2=4.3, 95% CI 3.9-4.7; P<.001). Median additional toileting events reported on the look-back survey were 1 (IQR 1-2) and 2 (IQR 1-2) on days 1 and 2, respectively. Overall concordance between self-reported location recording and GPS was 76% (188/247). Participants reported lower urge ratings when at home versus away when reporting real-time toileting (median rating 61, IQR 41-84 vs 72, IQR 56-98), and daily fluid intake showed a small to medium positive correlation with toileting frequency (day 1 r=0.3, day 2 r=0.24). Toileting frequency reported in \"Where I Go\" showed a small positive correlation with the frequency item from the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire (r=0.31 with day 1 toileting frequency and r=0.21 with day 2 toileting frequency).
\"Where I Go\" has potential to increase the understanding of factors that affect women's toileting decisions and long-term bladder health. We anticipate its use as a data collection tool in population-based studies.
Journal Article
Response to comment on: Hardikar et al. Spuriously high prevalence of prediabetes diagnosed by HbA(1c) in young indians partly explained by hematological factors and iron deficiency anemia. Diabetes Care 2012;35:797-802
by
Lubree, Himangi G
,
Hardikar, Pallavi S
,
Raut, Deepa A
in
Anemia, Iron-Deficiency - blood
,
Female
,
Glycated Hemoglobin - analysis
2013
Journal Article
Differential expression of genes influencing mitotic processes in cord blood mononuclear cells after a pre-conceptional micronutrient-based randomised controlled trial: Pune Rural Intervention in Young Adolescents (PRIYA)
2023
In The Pune Maternal Nutrition Study, vitamin B12 deficiency was seen in 65% of pregnant women, folate deficiency was rare. Maternal total homocysteine concentrations were inversely associated with offspring birthweight, and low vitamin B12 and high folate concentrations predicted higher offspring adiposity and insulin resistance. These findings guided a nested pre-conceptional randomised controlled trial ‘Pune Rural Intervention in Young Adolescents’. The interventions included: (1) vitamin B12+multi-micronutrients as per the United Nations International Multiple Micronutrient Antenatal Preparation, and proteins (B12+MMN), (2) vitamin B12 (B12 alone), and (3) placebo. Intervention improved maternal pre-conceptional and in-pregnancy micronutrient nutrition. Gene expression analysis in cord blood mononuclear cells in 88 pregnancies revealed 75 differentially expressed genes between the B12+MMN and placebo groups. The enriched biological processes included G2/M phase transition, chromosome segregation, and nuclear division. Enriched pathways included, mitotic spindle checkpoint and DNA damage response while enriched human phenotypes were sloping forehead and decreased head circumference. Fructose-bisphosphatase 2 (FBP2) and Cell Division Cycle Associated 2 (CDCA2) genes were under-expressed in the B12 alone group. The latter, involved in chromosome segregation was under-expressed in both intervention groups. Based on the role of B-complex vitamins in the synthesis of nucleotides and S-adenosyl methionine, and the roles of vitamins A and D on gene expression, we propose that the multi-micronutrient intervention epigenetically affected cell cycle dynamics. Neonates in the B12+MMN group had the highest ponderal index. Follow-up studies will reveal if the intervention and the altered biological processes influence offspring diabesity.
Journal Article
Effect of physiological doses of oral vitamin B12 on plasma homocysteine: a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial in India
2010
Background/Objectives: Vitamin B12 (B12) deficiency is common in Indians and a major contributor to hyperhomocysteinemia, which may influence fetal growth, risk of type II diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The purpose of this paper was to study the effect of physiological doses of B12 and folic acid on plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) concentration. Subjects/Methods: A cluster randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, 2 × 3 factorial trial, using the family as the randomization unit. B12 was given as 2 or 10 μg capsules, with or without 200 μg folic acid, forming six groups (B0F0, B2F0, B10F0, B0F200, B2F200 and B10F200). Plasma tHcy concentration was measured before and after 4 and 12 months of supplementation. Results: From 119 families in the Pune Maternal Nutrition Study, 300 individuals were randomized. There was no interaction between B12 and folic acid (P=0.14) in relation to tHcy concentration change and their effects were analyzed separately: B0 vs. B2 vs. B10; and F0 vs. F200. At 12 months, tHcy concentration reduced by a mean 5.9 (95% CI: −7.8, −4.1) μmol/l in B2, and by 7.1 (95% CI: −8.9, −5.4) μmol/l in B10, compared to nonsignificant rise of 1.2 (95% CI: −0.5, 2.9) μmol/l in B0. B2 and B10 did not differ significantly. In F200, tHcy concentration decreased by 4.8 (95% CI: −6.3, −3.3) μmol/l compared to 2.8 (95% CI: −4.3, −1.2) μmol/l in F0. Conclusion: Daily oral supplementation with physiological doses of B12 is an effective community intervention to reduce tHcy. Folic acid (200 μg per day) showed no additional benefit, neither had any unfavorable effects.
Journal Article