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Dive into the research topics where Padma S. Menon is active.

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Featured researches published by Padma S. Menon.


Endocrine Practice | 2010

PILOT STUDY TO EVALUATE THE EFFECT OF SHORT-TERM IMPROVEMENT IN VITAMIN D STATUS ON GLUCOSE TOLERANCE IN PATIENTS WITH TYPE 2 DIABETES MELLITUS

Deepal Parekh; Vijaya Sarathi; Vyankatesh Shivane; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

OBJECTIVE To study the effect of improvement in vitamin D status on glucose tolerance in Asian Indian patients with moderately controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). METHODS This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study was conducted in 28 Asian Indian patients with T2DM. Study participants were randomly assigned to a vitamin D-treated group (group D) or a placebo group (group P). Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D, hemoglobin A1c, and serum fructosamine levels were measured, and an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was performed in all patients at baseline and 4 weeks after intervention. During the OGTT, plasma glucose and serum insulin levels were measured at 0, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes. The unpaired t test was used to compare the groups at baseline and to compare the differences in changes from baseline to 4 weeks between the 2 study groups. RESULTS Group D and group P were similar with respect to their fasting plasma glucose and serum insulin concentrations, post-OGTT plasma glucose and serum insulin levels, and hemoglobin A1c and fructosamine values at baseline. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels increased significantly in group D at 4 weeks. No significant differences were found between the groups at baseline and 4 weeks with respect to serum fructosamine, fasting plasma glucose and serum insulin, post-OGTT plasma glucose and serum insulin levels, and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance. CONCLUSION In this study, short-term improvement in vitamin D status was not associated with improvement in glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, or insulin sensitivity in Asian Indian patients with moderately controlled T2DM.


Endocrine Practice | 2010

Efficacy of cabergoline in uncured (persistent or recurrent) Cushing disease after pituitary surgical treatment with or without radiotherapy.

Anurag Lila; Raju A. Gopal; Shrikrishna V. Acharya; Joe George; Vijaya Sarathi; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy of cabergoline therapy in patients with Cushing disease who remained uncured (had persistent or recurrent disease) after a pituitary surgical procedure with or without radiotherapy. METHODS We undertook a prospective, open-label, single-arm study, with short-term (5 months) and longterm (1 year) evaluations. In 20 patients with uncured Cushing disease, treatment was initiated with cabergoline at a dosage of 1 mg/wk, with a monthly increment of 1 mg, until midnight serum cortisol (MNSC) or low-dose dexamethasone suppression serum cortisol (LDSC) (or both) normalized or a maximal dosage of 5 mg/wk was reached. RESULTS Overall, 5 of 18 patients (28%) responded in terms of LDSC or MNSC (or both) at a mean dosage of 3.6 mg/wk (range, 2 to 5). When the response was defined with use of either LDSC or MNSC level as an isolated criterion, it was achieved in 4 of 16 patients (25%) and 3 of 18 patients (17%), respectively. Four patients were treated for 1 year, and the response was persistent in 2 and 3 patients on the basis of MNSC and LDSC levels, respectively. Lower baseline serum cortisol (basal, MNSC, and LDSC) values were predictive of a therapeutic response. CONCLUSION Cabergoline was an effective therapy in 28%, 25%, and 17% of patients with uncured Cushing disease in terms of LDSC or MNSC (or both), LDSC alone, and MNSC alone, respectively. Further studies are needed to address the persistence of the drug response and the effects on the dynamics of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.


Endocrine Practice | 2010

TREATmENT Of hyPOgONADIsm wITh TEsTOsTERONE IN PATIENTs wITh TyPE 2 DIAbETEs mEllITus

Raju A. Gopal; Nikita Bothra; Shrikrishna V. Acharya; Hosahithlu K. Ganesh; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

OBJECTIVE To investigate the effect of testosterone treatment on insulin resistance, glycemic control, and dyslipidemia in Asian Indian men with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and hypogonadism. METHODS We conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study in 22 men, 25 to 50 years old, with T2DM and hypogonadism. Patients were treated with intramuscularly administered testosterone (200 mg every 15 days) or placebo for 3 months in random order, followed by a washout period of 1 month before the alternative treatment phase. The primary outcomes were changes in fasting insulin sensitivity (as measured by homeostasis model assessment [HOMA] in those patients not receiving insulin), fasting blood glucose, and hemoglobin A1c. The secondary outcomes were changes in fasting lipids, blood pressure, body mass index, waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, and androgen deficiency symptoms. Statistical analysis was performed on the delta values, with the treatment effect of placebo compared with the effect of testosterone. RESULTS Treatment with testosterone did not significantly influence insulin resistance measured by the HOMA index (mean treatment effect, 1.67 +/- 4.29; confidence interval, -6.91 to 10.25; P>.05). Mean change in hemoglobin A1c (%) (-1.75 +/- 5.35; -12.46 to 8.95) and fasting blood glucose (mg/dL) (20.20 +/- 67.87; -115.54 to 155.94) also did not reach statistical significance. Testosterone treatment did not affect fasting lipids, blood pressure, and anthropometric determinations significantly. CONCLUSION In this study, testosterone treatment showed a neutral effect on insulin resistance and glycemic control and failed to improve dyslipidemia, control blood pressure, or reduce visceral fat significantly in Asian Indian men with T2DM and hypogonadism.


Indian Journal of Pediatrics | 2010

Primary hyperparathyroidism in children and adolescents

Joe George; Shrikrishna V. Acharya; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

ObjectivePrimary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) in children and adolescents is a rare condition. Awareness should improve in order to lower threshold for screening and allow intervention before serious and permanent sequelac occur.MethodsA retrospective analysis of 15 children and adolescents with PHPT (age <20 yr) seen in our clinic between 1993 and 2006.ResultsMean age of patients was 17.73 yr (Range — 13–20, Male-3: Female-12). Average duration of symptoms was 18.87 (range: 0–48) mo. Clinical features at presentation included bone pain (86.67%), proximal myopathy (46.67%), bony deformities (53.33%), fractures (60%), palpable osteitis fibrosa cystica (33.3%), renal calculi (40%), palpable neck swelling (13.3%) and acute pancreatitis (6.67%). None had positive family history or features suggestive of multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN). After biochemical confirmation, tumor was localised in all prior to surgery. Histopathology confirmed adenoma in all cases. Post-operative hungry bone syndrome occurred in 33.3%.ConclusionPHPT is more common in females. Presentation of the disease is similar to their adult counterparts except for more severe bone disease and less severe renal disease. MEN and familial non-MEN PHPT do not constitute a major cause of pediatric PHPT as against to worldwide data. The incidence of hyperplasia as a cause of PHPT is rare in our pediatric population.


Endocrine Practice | 2010

GIANT PROlACTINOmA AND EFFECTIVENEss OF mEDICAl mANAGEmENT

Shrikrishna V. Acharya; Raju A. Gopal; Padma S. Menon; Tushar Bandgar; Nalini S. Shah

OBJECTIVE To review our experience with long-term cabergoline and bromocriptine therapy in the treatment of giant prolactinomas. METHODS Patients with giant prolactinomas diagnosed and treated at our center in Mumbai, India, between January 2005 and January 2009 were included. Diagnostic criteria for giant prolactinoma included tumor diameter greater than 40 mm, serum prolactin concentration higher than 1000 ng/mL, and invasive tumor growth pattern with mass effects. Cabergoline was started at a dosage of 0.5 mg weekly and progressively increased as necessary up to 3.5 mg weekly. Patients were followed up with hormone measurements, sellar magnetic resonance imaging, and vision examinations. RESULTS The study group included 10 patients (5 male and 5 female), aged 17 to 50 years (mean, 36.1 years), treated for giant prolactinoma. In 8 patients, cabergoline was first-line therapy. Two patients had previously been prescribed bromocriptine, and this regimen was maintained. Mean serum prolactin concentration before treatment was 10,789 +/- 14,278 ng/mL (range, 1256-43,163 ng/mL; reference range, 5-17 ng/mL). Following treatment, levels normalized in 7 patients within 2 to 18 months (mean, 8.8 months) and decreased in 1 patient to a level 3 to 4 times that of normal. Tumor diameter, which measured from 4 to 7 cm at diagnosis, showed a mean maximal decrease of 49.28 +/- 18.27%; response was first noted about 6 months after treatment was begun. Seven patients had visual field defects at diagnosis; vision returned to normal in 3 and improved in 4. Testosterone levels, initially low in all male patients, normalized in 3. CONCLUSION Cabergoline should be first-line therapy for aggressive prolactinomas, even in those patients who present with visual field defects.


Endocrine Practice | 2009

Clinical Profile of Ectopic Thyroid in Asian Indians: A Single-Center Experience

Raju A. Gopal; Shrikrishna V. Acharya; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Hetal Marfatia; Nalini S. Shah

OBJECTIVE To assess clinical characteristics of patients with ectopic thyroid seen at a single tertiary care center in India. METHODS In this case series, we retrospectively reviewed the data of patients who presented with ectopic thyroid between January 1995 and March 2008. Clinical presentation, nuclear imaging findings, endocrine profile, and clinical management were analyzed. RESULTS Records of 22 female patients and 14 male patients were reviewed. Ectopic thyroid was more common in female patients. Mean age of presentation was 14.3 years (median, 14 years; range, 5 months to 40 years). Seventeen patients (47%) presented with lingual thyroid, detected incidentally or because of dysphagia and bleeding while eating, and 19 patients (53%) had sublingual thyroid, which mainly presented as an anterior neck swelling. Thirty patients (83%) had hypothyroidism (overt or subclinical). In 29 patients (81%), ectopic thyroid either in the neck or in the lingual area was the only functional thyroid tissue. Thirty-one patients (86%) were treated medically, and surgery was performed in only 5 patients (14%) who had either recurrent bleeding or dysphagia. CONCLUSIONS Ectopic thyroid should be considered during the evaluation of a midline neck mass or hypothyroidism. Careful clinical examination, thyroid function tests, and radionuclide imaging help establish the diagnosis and localize ectopic thyroid. Appropriate treatment should be decided on an individual basis.


Indian Journal of Pediatrics | 2009

Pheochromocytoma in children and adolescents

Hosahithlu K. Ganesh; Shrikrishna V. Acharya; Joe Goerge; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

Eleven subjects aged <20 yr with histologically proven pheochromocytoma between 1987 and 2006 were analyzed. Family history was present in 18%. In 2 patients, pheochromocytoma was part of VHL and in one it was associated with MEN 2. Twenty four hour urine VMA level was elevated in 100% and metanephrine level in 73%. CT/ MRI were showing the tumor in all. Prazosin extended release tablets (maximum 30 mg/day) were used in 73% and doxazosin (maximum 12 mg/ day) in 27%. Intraoperative BP fluctuations were seen in 27%. All were biochemically cured after surgery. Preoperative á blockade with extended release prazosin and doxazosin were effective in controlling perioperative BP fluctuations. Hence these drugs can be used in children and adolescents without fear of postoperative hypotension.


Indian Journal of Pathology & Microbiology | 2009

Primary hyperparathyroidism: a clinicopathological experience.

Pragati Aditya Sathe; Cv Madiwale; Bhuvaneshwari Mahendra Kandalkar; Tushar Bandgar; Nalini S. Shah; Padma S. Menon

BACKGROUND Parathyroid neoplasms form a small percentage of head and neck neoplasms. Primary hyperparathyroidism is caused by parathyroid adenomas, hyperplasia or, rarely, a carcinoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS This is a retrospective study of 48 parathyroidectomies received in the Department of Pathology of a major teaching hospital over a period of 10 years. Clinical, biochemical and radiological details were retrieved from medical records. Information regarding routine gross and microscopic examination findings (including frozen section and paraffin sections) was retrieved from departmental records. RESULTS We had 43 adenomas, three hyperplasias and two carcinomas. The most common age group was 21-30 years. The female:male ratio was 2.5:1. Most patients presented with skeletal manifestations. The pre-operative diagnosis was assisted by ultrasonography in 11 cases, computerized tomography of the neck in 10 cases and sestamibi scans in three cases. Intra-operative parathormone monitoring was performed in one case of adenoma. Frozen section was requested in 28 of 48 cases. There was a discrepancy between frozen section diagnosis and paraffin section diagnosis in two cases. CONCLUSION Histopathologic diagnosis is an important guide to decide the type of surgical management. Although pathologic features of parathyroid carcinoma are diagnostically reliable, those of the more commonly encountered lesions of adenoma and hyperplasia may be overlapping and, therefore, indistinctive, more so if only a single gland is available for examination. Because parathyroid lesions are only occasionally encountered by the surgical pathologist, awareness of the spectrum of histologic features along with knowledge of recent trends in diagnosis and surgical management are important.


Endocrine Practice | 2009

Prevalence of Hypogonadism in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in an Asian Indian Study Group

Hosahithlu K. Ganesh; H. A. Vijaya Sarathi; Joe George; Vyankatesh Shivane; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

OBJECTIVE To determine the prevalence of hypogonadism in Asian Indian patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and to correlate it with components of the metabolic syndrome and microvascular complications of T2DM. METHODS One hundred consecutive male patients with T2DM between 25 and 50 years of age and 50 age-matched healthy adults without diabetes underwent assessment. Calculated free testosterone was derived by using serum total testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin. Those patients with 2 calculated free testosterone values less than 64.8 pg/mL were diagnosed as having hypogonadism. RESULTS Of the 100 patients with T2DM, 15 (15%) were found to have hypogonadism-7 of 29 (24%) between 31 and 40 years of age and 8 of 67 (12%) between 41 and 50 years old. None of the 4 patients between 25 and 30 years old had hypogonadism. Eleven patients (73%) had hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, and 4 (27%) had hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. Among the control subjects, the prevalence of hypogonadism was 10%. In comparison with Western data, we found a higher prevalence of hypogonadism in patients with T2DM, especially in those in the 4th decade of life. The prevalence of hypogonadism was higher in obese patients, although it did not reach statistical significance. No statistically significant correlation was observed between hypogonadism and age, duration of diabetes, glycemic control, androgen deficiency symptoms, or microvascular complications. CONCLUSION The prevalence of hypogonadism was higher in the patients with diabetes than in the control subjects, although the difference did not reach statistical significance. There was no correlation of hypogonadism with components of the metabolic syndrome or microvascular complications of diabetes mellitus.


Indian Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012

Renal manifestations of primary hyperparathyroidism.

Anurag Lila; Vijaya Sarathi; Varsha S. Jagtap; Tushar Bandgar; Padma S. Menon; Nalini S. Shah

Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is associated with nephrolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis. Hypercalciuria is one of the multiple factors that is implicated in the complex pathophysiology of stone formation. The presence of a renal stone (symptomatic or asymptomatic) categorizes PHPT as symptomatic and is an indication for parathyroid adenomectomy. Progression of nephrocalcinosis is largely reversible after successful surgery, but the residual risk persists. PHPT is also associated with declining renal function. In case of asymptomatic mild PHPT, annual renal functional assessment is advised. Guidelines suggest that an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) < 60 ml / minute / 1.73 m2 is an indication for parathyroid adenomectomy. This article discusses how to monitor and manage renal stones and other related renal parameters in case of PHPT.

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Nalini S. Shah

King Edward Memorial Hospital

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Tushar Bandgar

King Edward Memorial Hospital

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Anurag Lila

King Edward Memorial Hospital

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Vyankatesh Shivane

King Edward Memorial Hospital

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Abhay N Dalvi

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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Varsha S. Jagtap

King Edward Memorial Hospital

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Pinky M Thapar

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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