Nikhil S. Padhye
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
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Featured researches published by Nikhil S. Padhye.
Physics Letters A | 1996
Nikhil S. Padhye; P. J. Morrison
Abstract Lagrangian symmetries are found for hydrodynamics and magnetohydrodynamics, which result in conservation of potential vorticity and of cross helicity, respectively. These symmetries, which persist in the reduction from Lagrangian to Eulerian variables, directly give rise to Casimir invariants of the Hamiltonian formalism. The mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking in a fluid is also presented.
Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing | 2004
M. Terese Verklan; Nikhil S. Padhye
Transition from fetal to neonatal life is likely the most physiologically demanding time of life. Complex changes in major organ system functioning and reorganization of metabolic processes must occur rapidly to achieve postnatal homeostasis. Identifying the neonate with subtle signs of unsuccessful transition is a challenge to the perinatal health care provider. Alterations in fetal or neonatal heart rate and heart rate variability may serve as an indicator of the neural control influencing cardiac function and a sensitive indicator of compromised health. Evaluation of the neural control of the heart can be done noninvasively and provides a discriminating measure of the level of stress vulnerability the fetus or newborn may be experiencing. This article reviews the origins of physiological variability of the fetal and neonatal heart rate in the transition to extrauterine life. The technique of spectral analysis as a new tool for surveillance of the at-risk fetus and neonate is then introduced, and implications for clinical practice and future research avenues are discussed.
Neonatology | 2009
Robert E. Lasky; Nehal A. Parikh; Amber L. Williams; Nikhil S. Padhye; Seetha Shankaran
Background: Little is known about the effects of hypothermia therapy and subsequent rewarming on the PQRST intervals and heart rate variability (HRV) in term newborns with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE). Objectives: This study describes the changes in the PQRST intervals and HRV during rewarming to normal core body temperature of 2 newborns with HIE after hypothermia therapy. Methods: Within 6 h after birth, 2 newborns with HIE were cooled to a core body temperature of 33.5°C for 72 h using a cooling blanket, followed by gradual rewarming (0.5°C per hour) until the body temperature reached 36.5°C. Custom instrumentation recorded the electrocardiogram from the leads used for clinical monitoring of vital signs. Generalized linear mixed models were calculated to estimate temperature-related changes in PQRST intervals and HRV. Results: For every 1°C increase in body temperature, the heart rate increased by 9.2 bpm (95% CI 6.8–11.6), the QTc interval decreased by 21.6 ms (95% CI 17.3–25.9), and low and high frequency HRV decreased by 0.480 dB (95% CI 0.052–0.907) and 0.938 dB (95% CI 0.460–1.416), respectively. Conclusions: Hypothermia-induced changes in the electrocardiogram should be monitored carefully in future studies.
Developmental Psychobiology | 2009
Nikhil S. Padhye; Amber L. Williams; Asif Z. Khattak; Robert E. Lasky
The objective of this longitudinal study, conducted in a neonatal intensive care unit, was to characterize the response to pain of high-risk very low birth weight infants (<1,500 g) from 23 to 38 weeks post-menstrual age (PMA) by measuring heart rate variability (HRV). Heart period data were recorded before, during, and after a heel lanced or wrist venipunctured blood draw for routine clinical evaluation. Pain response to the blood draw procedure and age-related changes of HRV in low-frequency and high-frequency bands were modeled with linear mixed-effects models. HRV in both bands decreased during pain, followed by a recovery to near-baseline levels. Venipuncture and mechanical ventilation were factors that attenuated the HRV response to pain. HRV at the baseline increased with post-menstrual age but the growth rate of high-frequency power was reduced in mechanically ventilated infants. There was some evidence that low-frequency HRV response to pain improved with advancing PMA.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Marcia C. de Oliveira Otto; Nikhil S. Padhye; Alain G. Bertoni; David R. Jacobs; Dariush Mozaffarian
Diet guidelines recommend increasing dietary diversity. Yet, metrics for dietary diversity have neither been well-defined nor evaluated for impact on metabolic health. Also, whether diversity has effects independent of diet quality is unknown. We characterized and evaluated associations of diet diversity and quality with abdominal obesity and type II diabetes (T2D) in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. At baseline (2000–02), diet was assessed among 5,160 Whites, Hispanic, Blacks, and Chinese age 45–84 y and free of T2D, using a validated questionnaire. Three different aspects of diet diversity were characterized including count (number of different food items eaten more than once/week, a broad measure of diversity), evenness (Berry index, a measure of the spread of the diversity), and dissimilarity (Jaccard distance, a measure of the diversity of the attributes of the foods consumed). Diet quality was characterized using aHEI, DASH, and a priori pattern. Count and evenness were weakly positively correlated with diet quality (r with AHEI: 0.20, 0.04), while dissimilarity was moderately inversely correlated (r = -0.34). In multivariate models, neither count nor evenness was associated with change in waist circumference (WC) or incident T2D. Greater food dissimilarity was associated with higher gain in WC (p-trend<0.01), with 120% higher gain in participants in the highest quintile of dissimilarity scores. Diet diversity was not associated with incident T2D. Also, none of the diversity metrics were associated with change in WC or incident T2D when restricted to only healthier or less healthy foods. Higher diet quality was associated with lower risk of T2D. Our findings provide little evidence for benefits of diet diversity for either abdominal obesity or diabetes. Greater dissimilarity among foods was actually associated with gain in WC. These results do not support the notion that “eating everything in moderation” leads to greater diet quality or better metabolic health.
Biological Research For Nursing | 2007
Cynthia McCarley; Sandra K. Hanneman; Nikhil S. Padhye; Michael H. Smolensky
The purposes of this pilot study are to describe the 24-hr patterns of dyspnea, fatigue, and peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and examine their interrelationships. The repeated-measures design protocol involved 10 patients with moderate to severe COPD who self-assessed dyspnea, fatigue, and PEFR five times a day for 8 days. Circadian rhythms were documented by single cosinor analysis in 40% of the participants for dyspnea, 60% for fatigue, and 60% for PEFR. The 8-day, 24-hr means of dyspnea and fatigue were moderately correlated; 70% of the sample displayed significant correlations. The means of PEFR and both dyspnea and fatigue were weakly negatively correlated. The findings suggest that circadian rhythm in lung function may not be temporally coupled with the circadian rhythm in dyspnea and fatigue in all patients and that the mean self-perceived levels of dyspnea and fatigue are moderately related.
international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2004
Nikhil S. Padhye; Z. Duan; M. T. Verklan
The heart rate variability of fetuses under stress from maternal uterine contractions conveys critical information to clinicians and also provides theoretical clues about heart rate regulatory mechanisms. According to the polyvagal theory, the deceleration of fetal heart rate under stress is caused by the withdrawal of vagal tone. Recovery is mediated by its reestablishment. An implication of this mechanism is that the respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is elevated after the deceleration and subsequent recovery. Findings from our clinical data on fetuses support this theory. The data also indicate that in the instance of a late deceleration the RSA may not be elevated after recovery.
Biological Research For Nursing | 2007
Nikhil S. Padhye; Sandra K. Hanneman
The application of cosinor models to long time series requires special attention. With increasing length of the time series, the presence of noise and drifts in rhythm parameters from cycle to cycle lead to rapid deterioration of cosinor models. The sensitivity of amplitude and model-fit to the data length is demonstrated for body temperature data from ambulatory menstrual cycling and menopausal women and from ambulatory male swine. It follows that amplitude comparisons between studies cannot be made independent of consideration of the data length. Cosinor analysis may be carried out on serial-sections of the series for improved model-fit and for tracking changes in rhythm parameters. Noise and drift reduction can also be achieved by folding the series onto a single cycle, which leads to substantial gains in the model-fit but lowers the amplitude. Central values of model parameters are negligibly changed by consideration of the autoregressive nature of residuals.
Advances in Skin & Wound Care | 2009
Mary Pat Rapp; Nancy Bergstrom; Nikhil S. Padhye
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of the study was to determine whether characterizing skin temperature regulation as a functional property of the skin as it relates to tissue tolerance improves the clinicians understanding of pressure ulcer risk prediction. DESIGN: A 2-group time-series design was used to observe skin temperature regularity (entropy) and self-similarity (spectral exponent). METHODS: Twenty nursing facility residents wore skin temperature monitors continuously for 5 days. One bathing episode was observed because bathing is a commonly occurring care procedure. PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURE: Difference in skin temperature multiscale entropy and spectral exponent by risk category and pressure ulcer outcome. RESULTS: Multiscale entropy (MSE) for skin temperature was lowest in those who developed pressure ulcers, F1,18 = 35.14, P < .001. Skin temperature mean MSE, F1,17 = 5.55, P = .031 and the skin temperature spectral exponent, F1,17 = 6.19, P = .023 differentiated the risk groups. The change in skin temperature entropy during bathing was significant, t(16) = 2.55, P = .021. CONCLUSIONS: Skin temperature MSE and the spectral exponent were significantly different between low-risk and higher risk residents and residents who did and did not develop pressure ulcers. The study supports measurement of skin temperature regulation as a component of tissue tolerance to pressure.
international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2009
Nikhil S. Padhye; Shannan K. Hamlin; Audrius Brazdeikis; Sandra K. Hanneman
Mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) are typically turned manually by nursing staff to reduce the risk of developing ventilator associated pneumonia and other problems in the lungs. However, turning can induce changes in the heart rate and blood pressure that can at times have a destabilizing effect. We report here on the early stage of a study that has been undertaken to measure the cardiovascular impact of manual turning, and compare it to changes induced when patients lie on automated beds that turn continuously. Heart rate and blood pressure data were analyzed over ensembles of turns with autoregressive models for comparing baseline level to the dynamic response. Manual turning stimulated a response in the heart rate that lasted for a median of 20 minutes and was of magnitude 5 to 13 bpm. The corresponding response in mean arterial pressure was 11 to 19 mm Hg, lasting for 8 to 21 minutes. There was no discernible response of either variable to automated turns.