Browsing by Author "V.N.P. Tripathi"
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PublicationArticle AVULSION INJURY OF UTEROVAGINAL PROLAPSE AND BLADDER(1976) Shail Khanna; V.N.P. TripathiA 40‐year‐old postmenopausal female with complete uterine prolapse received an avulsion injury when her sari was caught in the fast‐moving belt of a flour mill machine. Part of the prolapsed anterior vaginal wall with underlying bladder wall was torn off. Primary repair together with vaginal hysterectomy led to an uneventful recovery. Copyright © 1976, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reservedPublicationArticle Blunt renal injury-an experience of 30 cases(1986) P.B. Singh; S.S. Ambasta; V.N.P. Tripathi; R. Agrawal; M. Singh; S. VajpeyiThirty cases of blunt renal injury are reviewed. The need for rapid and accurate diagnosis of these cases with excretory urography, supplemented in certain patients with renal angiography, is discussed. High-dose excretory urography allows the cases to be categorized into minor or major injuries. All minor injuries can be managed without operation. For major injuries, a conservative approach, if necessary followed by surgical exploration, avoids loss of organ in most of the cases. © 1986.PublicationArticle Experience With Vaso-Vasostomy: Technique And Result(Georg Thieme Verlag, 2024) P.B. Singh; Hemant Kumar; S.S. Ambasta; V.N.P. TripathiFifteen patients underwent recanalization procedure by single layer non magnified anastomosis with splint. In 12 patients (807%) reappearance of sperm was found with sperm count ranging from 5-6/H.P.F. to 40 million/ml. No side effect was observed due to splint. © 2024 Georg Thieme Verlag. All rights reserved.PublicationArticle Fat-soluble vitamin profile in filarial chyluria - A preliminary study(1999) M. Sridhar; D.K. Pal; I.D. Saxena; U.S. Dwivedi; V.N.P. Tripathi; P.B. Singh[No abstract available]PublicationArticle March hemoglobinuria: Report of a case(1973) B. Dube; R.K. Dube; V.N.P. Tripathi[No abstract available]PublicationArticle Muscle involvement in association with filarial chyluria(1979) P.P. Ashok; B.C. Katiyar; B. Dube; P.K. Shukla; V.N.P. TripathiTwenty unselected consecutive patients of filarial chyluria were evaluated clinically, electromyographically, and histopathologically for neuromuscular dysfunction. None of the patients showed clinical evidence of muscle wasting or weakness suggesting myopathy, although generalized muscle weakness was complained by all of them particularly while climbing the stairs or on getting up or during lifting heavy wieghts. Electromyographic abnormalities were found in nine patients and slight histopathological abnormalities in two. The average duration of motor unit potentials and the mean amplitude were reduced, compatible with myopathy. There were no fibrillation potentials. Histological abnormalities consisted of a marked variation in muscle fibre size, sarcolemmal nuclear proliferation, and mild interstitial fatty infiltration. None of the patients showed evidence of clinical neuropathy, abnormalities in conduction velocity along the nerves or signs of segmental demyelination in the biopsy of the nerve. Our data suggest that muscle weakness in these patients is myopathic in nature without peripheral nerve involvement, and is possibly due to hypoproteinaemia and hypolipidaemia, as these patients lose excessive amounts of protein and fat in their urine. Copyright © 1979, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reservedPublicationArticle Proceedings of the international session of the 26th annual meeting October 18-20, 1984-Chiba, Japan(Springer-Verlag, 1985) Y. Kato; H. Miyamori; M. Unoura; N. Ohmizo; N. Tanaka; K. Kobayashi; N. Hattori; Y. Arakawa; S. Amaki; T. Shikata; Bang-Hyun Liu; K. Kanai; S. Morioka; M. Nishida; H. Noto; K. Takahashi; K. Matsushita; R.P. Beasley; Lu-Yu Hwang; M. Yano; M. Shima; E. Tsunoda; M. Koga; T. Minamino; T. Tsuji; K. Kagawa; T. Okuno; T. Takino; Takeshi Kurihara; Hiroshi Obata; K. Okita; T. Konishi; Y. Kado; O. Yokosuka; M. Omata; F. Imazeki; M. Ryuu; K. Okuda; Keiji Mitamura; D.S. Chen; J.L. Sung; M.Y. Lai; J.C. Sheu; H.C. Hsu; T. Nakamura; T. Morizane; M. Tsuchiya; K. Kobayashi; K. Okawa; K. Kobayashi; A. Kitano; S. Kuwajima; H. Hashimura; T. Matsumoto; M. Hiki; S. Yamamoto; Y. Kinoshita; H. Nagura; Y. Shioda; Y. Tsutsumi; H. Hasegawa; K. Watanabe; T. Kanoh; O. Nishida; H. Uchino; T. Miyake; Y. Hishitani; D.K. Bhargava; B.N.Tandon Shriniwas; B.M.L. Kapur; T.C. Chawla; Usha Kiran; J.P. Gupta; A.K. Jain; B.K. Agrawal; Saroj Gupta; M. Chiba; M. Sasaki; M. Konn; Y. Yamanaka; T. Morita; T. Hashizume; K. Nara; H. Odagiri; M. Fujii; K. Ono; Y. Nio; T. Tsuchitani; T. Inamoto; H. Kodama; T. Tobe; Z.R. Shi; Y.S. Kim; H. Yamaoka; K. Nishiyama; S. Tajima; T. Fukushima; S. Tsuchiya; K. Kuroe; A. Kimura; Y. Suwa; H. Furukawa; T. Miyake; M. Watanabe; T. Yoshida; S. Aiso; H. Asakura; M. Tsuchiya; M. Miura; N. Hiwatashi; Y. Fujiyama; K. Kobayashi; T. Bamba; S. Hosoda; Y. Benno; Y. Wakashin; M. Wakashin; T. Mori; S. Ueda; H. Yoshida; Y. Mori; K. Okuda; Li You; Ye Wei-Fa; Guang-Xao Yang; Wei-Fa Ye; R.H.H. Nelwan; B.M. Gandhi; H. Gupta; M. Irshad; B.N. Tandon; Mong Cho; Xie-ning Wu; Rakesh K. Tandon; A.K. Srivastava; R.K. Misra; Shi-hu Jiang; Yan-zun Lin; S.A. Abdurachman; Sujono Hadi; K.R. Bhat; Wang Baoen; N. Madanagopalan; V. Solomon; V. Jayanthi; K. Raghuram; I. Kandasamy; S. Annapoorani; A. Gajarai; M. Panchanadam; Y.K. Joshi; A. Hassan; H. Guntur; R. Soemarto; S.H. Rahardja; W. Soemarto; Keun-Soo Park; G.B. Yao; L.M. Zhang; M.F. Wu; S.T. Tong; Y.F. Tian; N. Iwai; H. Kaneda; T. Tsuto; J. Yanagihara; T. Takahashi; Zhang Jinkun; Hamid A. Durrani; J.P. Gupta; A.K. Jain; A.K. Govil; V.N.P. Tripathi; Z.R. Shi; D.Y. Yin; F.Q. Wen; Jinkun Zhang; V.C. Balasubramania; P.S. Are; S.P. Thyagarajan; S. Mahadevan; S. Dravidamani; Pranesh Nigam; A.K. Agrawal; K.K. Kapoor; L. Lesmana; H. Sidharta; W. Marwoto; N. Akbar; A. Sulaiman; H.M. Sjaifoellah Noer; J.P. Gupta; B.V. Tantry; A.K. Jain; J.C. Sheu; D.S. Chen; J.L. Sung; C.N. Chuang; P.M. Yang; J.T. Lin; H.C. Hsu; J.C. Sheu; Y.H. Lin; D.S. Chen; C.S. Lee; L.Y. Hwang; A.K. Gupta[No abstract available]PublicationArticle Result of suprapubic cystostomy only as primary management of posterior urethral rupture following pelvic fracture(1988) P.B. Singh; D. Karmakar; R.C. Gupta; U.S. Dwivedi; V.N.P. TripathiForty-five patients with posterior urethral injury following pelvic fractures were managed by suprapubic cystostomy alone as primary managament. Simultaneous voiding cystourethrogram with retrograde urethrogram six weeks later revealed non-obliterative stricture in eight and total block in 36. Impotence was seen in 20 patients. Eight patients witn non-obliterative stricture responded to optical internal urethrotomy. Out of 36 total block, 30 had long strictures in the posterior urethra and required transpubic urethroplasty. Impotence was not affected by transpubic urethroplasty.PublicationArticle Urachus cyst with carcinoma(1976) V.N.P. Tripathi; A.P. Pandey; B.L. RastogiA 53 years old man was admitted with recurrent profuse painless heamaturia for 18 months and passage of fleshy pieces in the urine for 6 months. He developed profound weakness, loss of appetite and loss of weight for 2 months prior to admission. A cystogram showed a filling defect in the dome of the bladder. Cystoscopic examination showed a necrotic fungating tumour situated in the dome of the bladder. Surgical exploration revealed a globular cystic mass originating from the dome of the bladder. It was freely mobile. The mass was delivered out by dividing the median umbilical ligament and a few vascular adhesions. A partial cystectomy together with the removal of the mass was performed. Gross examination showed a 4inch x 2inch oblong cystic mass with prominent new blood vessels. There was an indurated area about an inch away from the amputated end. The cut specimen revealed a urachus cyst filled with blood clot at the cephalic end and a solid tumour at caudal end in the transition zone between the bladder and the cyst. The histological diagnosis was a urachus cyst together with transitional cell carcinoma.PublicationArticle Urodiagrams: A new method of uroflow pattern analysis(1983) V.N.P. Tripathi; M. SridharUroflow diagrams, obtained by plotting the mean flow rate at 1-second intervals for controls and patients with bladder outflow obstruction, have been studied in 60 healthy controls and 100 patients. Standard patterns were obtained for male and female controls in 3 different age groups and for patients with various types of lower urinary tract obstruction. Outflow diagrams in age and sex-matched controls were compared to those obtained from patients, indicating the nature and the site of obstruction.PublicationReview Uroflowmetry in Congenital Phimosis, Hypospadias and Meatal Stenosis(A Preliminary Report)(Georg Thieme Verlag, 2024) V.N.P. Tripathi; M. Sridhar[No abstract available]
