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Featured researches published by Nadir Ali Syed.


Medical Education | 2007

Reasons for migration among medical students from Karachi.

Nadir Ali Syed; Farhad Khimani; Marie Andrades; Syeda Kausar Ali; Rose Paul

Contextu2002 The subject of economic migration among health care professionals has received intense attention. However, the aetiology of this migration has not been rigorously evaluated in Pakistan. Such knowledge can potentially influence health care and academic policies. Our current study proposes to quantify the relative contributions of various personal, professional and economic variables among final‐year medical students in Karachi.


BMC Neurology | 2005

Autonomic nervous system dysfunction predicts poor prognosis in patients with mild to moderate tetanus

Mohammad Wasay; Bhojo Khealani; Naasha Talati; Rohmah Shamsi; Nadir Ali Syed; Naseem Salahuddin

BackgroundAutonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction is present in up to one third of patients with tetanus. The prognostic value of ANS dysfunction is known in severe tetanus but its value is not well established in mild to moderate tetanus.MethodsMedical records of all patients admitted with tetanus at two academic tertiary care centers in Karachi, Pakistan were reviewed. The demographic, clinical and laboratory data was recorded and analyzed. ANS dysfunction was defined as presence of labile or persistent hypertension or hypotension and sinus tachycardia, tachyarrythmia or bradycardia on EKG. Patients were divided into two groups based on presence of ANS dysfunction (ANS group and non ANS group). Tetanus severity was classified on the basis of Ablett criteria.ResultsNinety six (64 males; 32 females) patients were admitted with the diagnosis over a period of 10 years. ANS group had 31 (32%) patients while non ANS group comprised of 65 (68%) patients. Both groups matched for age, gender, symptom severity, use of tetanus immunoglobulin and antibiotics. Twelve patients in ANS group had mild to moderate tetanus (Ablett I and II) and 19 patients had severe/very severe tetanus (Ablett III and IV). Fifteen (50%) patients in ANS group required ventilation as compared to 28 (45%) in non-ANS group (p = 0.09). Fourteen (47%) patients died in ANS group as compared to 10 (15%) in non ANS group (p= 0.002). Out of those 14 patients died in ANS group, six patients had mild to moderate tetanus and eight patients had severe/ very severe tetanus. Major cause of death was cardiac arrhythmias (13/14; 93%) in ANS group and respiratory arrest (7/10; 70%) in non ANS group. Ten (33%) patients had complete recovery in ANS group while in non ANS group 35(48%) patients had complete recovery (p= 0.05).ConclusionsANS dysfunction was present in one third of our tetanus population. 40% patients with ANS dysfunction had only mild to moderate tetanus. ANS dysfunction, irrespective of the need of mechanical ventilation or severity of tetanus, predicted poor outcome.


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2009

Experiences from an International Tele-Epilepsy Collaboration

S. Nizam Ahmed; Carly Mann; Fowzia Siddiqui; Mughis Sheerani; Nadir Ali Syed; Thomas Snyder; S. Ather Enam; Warren Boling

OBJECTIVEnOur main objective was to use videoconferencing as a primary means to: a) assist in launching an epilepsy surgery program in Pakistan; 2) participate in case conferences on complex epilepsy patients in each country.nnnMETHODSnExtensive testing using both point to point and bridged integrated service digital network (ISDN) and internet protocol (IP) connections was carried out using bandwidths of 384-768 kilobits per second (kbps). Videoconferences between sites were arranged two to three weeks in advance and connections were tested a day prior to the scheduled conference. Sharing of PowerPoint presentations, neuroimaging and video-EEG was available to all sites. Discussions centered on patients with medically refractory epilepsy.nnnRESULTSnBetween July 2006 and June 2008, 17 sessions were booked. Five of these conferences bridged in specialists from West Virginia University. Most successful connections occurred using IP point to point calls or a bridge connecting end points through IP at 512 kbps. We conducted three surgeries for medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy in Pakistan. At follow-up in January 2009, two patients have been seizure free and one had two breakthrough seizures after sudden unsupervised discontinuation of Levetiracetam.nnnCONCLUSIONnOur international tele-epilepsy collaboration has proven feasible and valuable to all participants. Our experience suggests considerable thought and preparation are needed before a teleconference to ensure its success. We provide a recipe to set-up similar telemedicine collaborations. Considerations include time zone differences, equipment type, interoperability between endpoints, connection capabilities, bandwidth availability, and backup plans for unsuccessful connections. Telemedicine can facilitate epilepsy care around the world, identifying with the concept of a Global Health Village.


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2009

Early Ischemic Stroke Presentation in Pakistan

Ayeesha Kamran Kamal; Bhojo Khealani; Sajjad Ahmed Ansari; Maria B. Afridi; Nadir Ali Syed

INTRODUCTIONnThere are no studies from Pakistan that describe stroke presentation rates or factors associated with early or delayed presentation. This is important to know because current clinical protocols limit the use of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA), the only available therapy for acute ischemic stroke, to a three-hour window from symptom onset.nnnMETHODSnAll patients aged 14 years or above with acute ischemic stroke of < or = 48 hours duration were prospectively identified from the Aga Khan University Stroke Data Bank over a 22-month period ending May 2001.nnnRESULTSn269 ischemic stroke patients presented within 48 hours of stroke onset. 55 out of 269 (21%) presented within first three hours and 110 out of 269 (41%) within first six hours. Unawareness of treatment options (p < 0.001) and inappropriate diagnosis and field triage (p = 0.005) were associated with delayed presentation. Small vessel occlusion or lacunar stroke in the TOAST (Trial of ORG 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment) ischemic stroke subtype was associated with delayed presentation (p = 0.047) and cardioembolic stroke was associated with earlier presentation (p = 0.048). Stroke severity assessed with the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale at a cut off score of > or = 15 was not associated with earlier time to presentation at three hours (p = 0.114) but there was some tendency at six hours (p = 0.097).nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe rate of early stroke presentation in a Pakistani tertiary care facility is comparable to certain developed countries. To increase the proportion of patients who can benefit from thrombolytic therapy, programs need to be instituted to increase public awareness of treatment options for stroke and expedited referral by the primary care provider.


World Journal of Surgery | 2008

Surgical Training Programs in Pakistan

Jamsheer J Talati; Nadir Ali Syed

AbstractThis paper traces the history and describes the status of surgical training in Pakistan. A key revelation is that excellent surgeons are produced through systems which on formal review might appear to lack standards. Personal characteristics of residents modify outcomes in high volume surgical training units; and consequent variation in quality of outputs is noted. Attention needs to be given to (i) develop new educational systems which are not prolonged costly and cumbersome, and which produce the adequate number, types and spread of highly skilled and cognitively developed empathic surgeons for the country; (ii) the improvement of the health systems which currently impede the development of surgeons and (iii) novel wars of tackling rural urban disparities in health delivery.n


International Journal of Advanced Computer Science and Applications | 2015

Detection of Denial of Service Attack in Wireless Network using Dominance based Rough Set

Nadir Ali Syed; Siraj Ahmed; D. P. Acharjya

Denial-of-service (DoS) attack is aim to block the services of victim system either temporarily or permanently by sending huge amount of garbage traffic data in various types of protocols such as transmission control protocol, user datagram protocol, internet connecting message protocol, and hypertext transfer protocol using single or multiple attacker nodes. Maintenance of uninterrupted service system is technically difficult as well as economically costly. With the invention of new vulnerabilities to system new techniques for determining these vulnerabilities have been implemented. In general, probabilistic packet marking (PPM) and deterministic packet marking (DPM) is used to identify DoS attacks. Later, intelligent decision proto-type was proposed. The main advantage is that it can be used with both PPM and DPM. But it is observed that, data available in the wireless network information system contains uncertainties. Therefore, an effort has been made to detect DoS attack using dominance based rough set. The accuracy of the proposed model obtained over the KDD cup dataset is 99.76 and it is higher than the accuracy achieved by resilient back propagation (RBP) model.


Journal of Pakistan Medical Association | 2003

Cost of Acute Stroke Care at a tertiary care hospital in Karachi, Pakistan

Bhojo Khealani; Z. F. Javed; Nadir Ali Syed; Saad Shafqat; Mohammad Wasay


Journal of Pakistan Medical Association | 2003

Should Carotid Endarterectomy be performed for Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis Pakistan

Nadir Ali Syed; A. Zakaria; Bhojo A. Khealani; Mohammad Wasay; S. M. Baig; Z. Sophie


Journal of Pakistan Medical Association | 2003

Moyamoya disease: an elusive diagnosis.

K. B. Asumal; N. Akhtar; Nadir Ali Syed; Saad Shafqat; S. M. Baig


Journal of Pakistan Medical Association | 2008

Hypotension at presentation is an indicator of poor prognosis in acute intracerebral haemorrhage

Mohammad Wasay; Bhojo Khealani; Saad Shafqat; Ayesha Kamal; Nadir Ali Syed

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Bhojo A. Khealani

Aga Khan University Hospital

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