Mahesh Desai
University of Southern Denmark
185 Papers
330 Citations
Mahesh Desai is an academic researcher from University of Southern Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Percutaneous nephrolithotomy. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 144 publications. Previous affiliations of Mahesh Desai include University of Luxembourg & Muljibhai Patel Urological Hospital.
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Papers
Strict cospeciation of devescovinid flagellates and Bacteroidales ectosymbionts in the gut of dry‐wood termites (Kalotermitidae)
Mahesh Desai,Jürgen F. H. Strassert,Katja Meuser,Horst Hertel,Wakako Ikeda-Ohtsubo,Renate Radek,Andreas Brune +6 more
TL;DR: The molecular phylogenies of devescovinid flagellates and their symbionts from a wide range of dry-wood termites and their ectosymbionts showed a well-supported congruence, underscoring the general perception that the evolutionary history of flagella-bacteria symbioses in the termite gut is complex.
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'Microperc' micro percutaneous nephrolithotomy: evidence to practice.
Mahesh Desai,Shashikant Mishra +1 more
TL;DR: The other advantage of microperc is that it is a novel single-step renal access procedure, resulting in a shorter insertion to lithotripsy time, which may provide a new standard of obtaining renal access.
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Percutaneous renal access training: content validation comparison between a live porcine and a virtual reality (VR) simulation model.
Shashikant Mishra,Abraham Kurien,Arvind Ganpule,Veeramani Muthu,Ravindra Sabnis,Mahesh Desai +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the content validity (realism and usefulness) of percutaneous renal access (PRA) obtained on a live porcine model and a high-fidelity computer-based surgical simulator (PERC Mentor, Simbionix; Lod, Israel) in their skills laboratory for trainees interested in PRA training, so as to determine which of the two is a more appropriate and effective training model.
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Deprivation of dietary fiber in specific-pathogen-free mice promotes susceptibility to the intestinal mucosal pathogen Citrobacter rodentium.
Mareike Neumann,Alex Steimle,Erica T. Grant,Mathis Wolter,Amy Parrish,Stéphanie Willieme,Dirk Brenner,Dirk Brenner,Eric C. Martens,Mahesh Desai +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a low-fiber diet-induced changes in the gut microbial ecology collectively contribute to a lethal colitis by the mucosal pathogen Citrobacter rodentium, which is used as a mouse model for enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EPEC) infections.
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A deep learning system for prostate cancer diagnosis and grading in whole slide images of core needle biopsies
Nitin Singhal,Shailesh Soni,Saikiran Bonthu,Nilanjan Chattopadhyay,Pranab Samanta,Uttara P Joshi,Amit Jojera,Taher Chharchhodawala,Ankur Agarwal,Mahesh Desai,Arvind Ganpule +10 more
TL;DR: In this article , a DL approach for segmenting and grading epithelial tissue using a novel training methodology that learns domain agnostic features was proposed, which showed an accuracy of 83.1% and κquad of 0.93 on 1303 WSI from two centers (blind evaluation).