Ranadhir Mitra
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
14 Papers
31 Citations
Ranadhir Mitra is an academic researcher from All India Institute of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cerebral perfusion pressure & Cerebral blood flow. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 14 publications.
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Papers
Blood groups systems
TL;DR: A proper understanding of the blood group system, their clinical significance, typing and cross-matching tests, and current perspective are of paramount importance to prevent transfusion-related complications.
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A comparative study between intraoperativelow-dose ketamine and dexmedetomidine, as an anaesthetic adjuvant in lumbar spine instrumentation surgery for the post-operative analgesic requirement
TL;DR: In patients undergoing lumbar instrumentation surgery, opioid consumption, VAS scores, PCA pump bad demands, inhalational agent consumption, hospital stay were comparable when either ketamine or dexmedetomidine was used as intraoperative anesthetic adjuvants.
The Neurocritical Care Society of India (NCSI) and the Indian Society of Neuroanaesthesiology and Critical Care (ISNACC) joint position statement and advisory on the practice of neurocritical care during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Ponniah Vanamoorthy,Gyaninder Pal Singh,Prasanna Udupi Bidkar,Ranadhir Mitra,Kamath Sriganesh,Siddharth Chavali,Radhakrishnan Muthuchellapan,Venkatesh H Keshavan,Saurabh Anand,Keshav Goyal,Rahul Yadav,Girija P. Rath,Shashi Srivastava +12 more
TL;DR: This joint position statement and advisory on the practice of neuro critical care during the COVID-19 pandemic by the Neurocritical Care Society of India and the Indian Society of Neuroanaesthesiology and Critical Care has been developed to guide clinicians providing care to the critically ill neurological patients in the neurocritical care unit during the current pandemic.
High altitude cerebral edema with a fatal outcome within 24 h of its onset: Shall acclimatization be made compulsory?
TL;DR: This paper focuses on the use of intra-arterial medications when venous access is not available, and the substitute for the intravenous route.
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Mild hypothermia after intravenous thrombolysis in patients with acute stroke a randomised controlled trial
TL;DR: It is concluded that mild hypothermia with a surface‐cooling device in an acute stroke unit is safe and feasible in awake patients with stroke.