Nandita Gupta
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
155 Papers
792 Citations
Nandita Gupta is an academic researcher from All India Institute of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vitamin D and neurology & vitamin D deficiency. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 153 publications. Previous affiliations of Nandita Gupta include Texas A&M University & AIIMS, New Delhi.
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Papers
Prevalence and significance of low 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations in healthy subjects in Delhi
Ravinder Goswami,Nandita Gupta,Deepti Goswami,Raman K. Marwaha,Nikhil Tandon,Narayana Kochupillai +5 more
TL;DR: Healthy subjects with low 25(OH)D concentrations are at risk of bone mineral metabolic imbalance when exposed to factors that strain bone mineral homeostasis.
452
Prevalence of multiple micronutrient deficiencies amongst pregnant women in a rural area of Haryana
Priyali Pathak,Umesh Kapil,Suresh K. Kapoor,Renu Saxena,Anand Kumar,Nandita Gupta,Sada Nand Dwivedi,Rajvir Singh,Preeti Singh +8 more
TL;DR: Univariate and Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that low dietary intake of nutrients, low frequency of consumption of food groups rich in micronutrients and increased reproductive cycles with short interpregnancy intervals were important factors leading tomicronutrient deficiencies.
224
•Journal Article
Presence of 25(OH) D deficiency in a rural North Indian village despite abundant sunshine.
Ravinder Goswami,Narayana Kochupillai,Nandita Gupta,Deepti Goswami,Namrata Singh,Anuradha Dudha +5 more
TL;DR: With longer sunshine exposure subjects residing in rural area had better mean 25(OH)D values than that of urbans, however, 70% of them were still vitamin D deficient, indicating the need for the countrywide vitamin D food fortification program irrespective of rural or urban setting.
157
Polymerase chain reaction in clinically suspected genitourinary tuberculosis : comparison with intravenous urography, bladder biopsy, and urine acid fast bacilli culture
TL;DR: It is evident from this series that PCR provides a much faster diagnosis of urinary MTb and is a rapid, sensitive, and specific diagnostic method and avoids a delay in starting treatment.
144
Residual goitre in the postiodization phase: iodine status, thiocyanate exposure and autoimmunity
Raman K. Marwaha,Nikhil Tandon,Nandita Gupta,Asis Kumar Karak,Kusum Verma,Narayana Kochupillai +5 more
TL;DR: Assessment of goitre prevalence, thyroid functional status and cause of residualGoitre among school children in the postsalt iodization phase in India found no change in either prevalence or functional status.
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