Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Praveen Khairkar is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Praveen Khairkar.


Indian Journal of Psychiatry | 2015

Indian Psychiatric Society multicentric study on assessment of health-care needs of patients with severe mental illnesses.

Sandeep Grover; Ajit Avasthi; Sandip Shah; Bhavesh Lakdawala; Kaustav Chakraborty; Naresh Nebhinani; Roy Abraham Kallivayalil; Pranob K Dalal; Vishal Sinha; Praveen Khairkar; Divya G Mukerjee; R. Thara; Prakash B Behere; Nidhi Chauhan; M Thirunavukarasu; Sameer Malhotra

Aim: To assess the health-care needs of the patients with severe mental disorders. Materials and Methods: Patients with the diagnosis of a severe mental disorder (schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders, bipolar disorder, recurrent depressive disorder, major depressive disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder) were assessed using Camberwell Assessment of Need-Research version (CAN-R) Scale and indigenously designed Supplementary Needs Assessment Scale (SNAS). Results: The study included 1494 patients recruited from 15 centers. The most common diagnostic group was that of affective disorders (55.3%), followed by psychotic disorders (37.6%). The mean number of total needs as perceived by the patients was 7.6 on the CAN-R. About two-third of the needs as assessed on CAN-R were met, and one-third were unmet. On CAN-R, main domains of needs as reported by patients were those of money, welfare benefits, transport, information about the illness and treatment, relief of psychological distress, company, household skills and intimate relationships. On SNAS, the mean number of total needs as perceived by the patients was 7.6 of which 4.1 were met needs. The most common domains of needs as assessed on SNAS were those of financial help, medical reimbursement, psychoeducation, free treatment, certification of mental illness, flexible work/job timings, addressing the caregiver stress and legal aid. Conclusion: About two-third of the needs, of the patients with severe mental disorders are met as assessed using CAN-R. However, higher percentages of unmet needs are identified on SNAS. In view of the commonly reported needs, a change in the orientation of services offered to people with mental disorders is very much called for. At the government level, desired policies must be formulated to support the patients with mental disorders.


Indian Journal of Psychiatry | 2015

Indian Psychiatric Society multicentric study on assessment of health-care needs of patients with severe mental illnesses as perceived by their family caregivers and health-care providers

Sandeep Grover; Ajit Avasthi; Sandip Shah; Bhavesh Lakdawala; Kaustav Chakraborty; Naresh Nebhinani; Roy Abraham Kallivayalil; Pranob K Dalal; Vishal Sinha; Praveen Khairkar; Divya G Mukerjee; R. Thara; Prakash B Behere; Nidhi Chauhan; M Thirunavukarasu; Sameer Malhotra

Aim: To study the health-care needs of the patients with severe mental disorders as perceived by their family caregivers and the treating psychiatrists. Materials and Methods: Caregivers of patients with severe mental disorders and their treating psychiatrists were assessed using Camberwell Assessment of Need-Research Version (CAN-R) scale and indigenously designed Supplementary Assessment of Needs Scale (SNAS). Results: The study included 1494 patients recruited from 15 centers. The mean needs as per the CAN-R, perceived by the caregivers were 7.8 and treating psychiatrists were 8.1. About one-third of needs were unmet. On SNAS, both caregivers and treating psychiatrists reported a mean of 7.9 needs, of which more than half were unmet as per the caregivers. As per the treating psychiatrists, 45.5% of the needs as assessed on SNAS were unmet. There was a high level of correlation between needs perceived by the patients, caregivers and the treating psychiatrists. On CAN-R, main domains of needs as reported by the caregivers were those of money, relief of psychological distress, information about the illness and treatment, welfare benefits, transport, company and food. As per the treating psychiatrists, the most common total needs identified were those of relief of psychological distress, welfare benefits, information about the illness and treatment, money, transport, company self-care and physical health. The most common domains of needs as assessed on SNAS as per the caregivers were those of free treatment, medical reimbursement, psychoeducation, financial help, social support, insurance, more time from the clinicians and travel concession. The treating psychiatrists identified dealing with caregivers stress as the most common need. Conclusions: According to the family caregivers and treating psychiatrists, about one-third of the needs of the patients as assessed using CAN-R and about half of the needs as assessed using SNAS are unmet.


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2012

17 Years of Treatment-Resistant Mutism in Non-Catatonic, Childhood-Onset Schizophrenia: A Rare Case Report

Praveen Khairkar; Varun Jain; Amit Bhatnagar; Narendra Saoji

To the Editor: Mutism is one of the commonest psychopathological symptom manifestations seen especially in catatonic schizophrenia and may appear in several different clinical settings. Important organic causes of mutism include head injury; posterior fossa surgery; encephalitis; frontal lobe lesions; the post-ictal phase of epilepsy; laryngeal tumors; and endocrine disorders, including hyperparathyroidism, myxoedema, diabetic ketoacidosis, and Addison’s disease. Medications capable of inducing mutism include tacrolimus and cyclosporine. There are reports of mutism lasting for years in catatonic schizophrenia. The largest report on mutism associated with non-catatonic schizophrenia is from the Kosraean population, where it is described as a specific cultural variant of psychopathology. Mutism has lasted from a few days to 20 years in this community and is noted in the initial part of the illness, predicting relapse. To our knowledge, only two cases of longstanding mutism associated with paranoid schizophrenia had been reported in the literature, but not in the pediatric age-group as yet. We report the first case of longstanding, treatment-resistant mutism in childhood-onset, noncatatonic schizophrenia, which was repeatedly suspected to be of neurological nature and lasted for about 17 years from its onset without remission, observed and treated in a rural, tertiary-care psychiatric hospital in Central India.


Journal of Ect | 2016

Prolonged Apnea During Modified Electroconvulsive Therapy in a Patient of Suicidal Attempt by Organophosphorus Poisoning: A Case Report.

Rajesh Dhakne; Kshirod Kumar Mishra; Vinay Kumar; Praveen Khairkar

Organophosphorus (OP) pesticides are commonly used in agricultural fields to control pests in India. However, exposure to it can cause poisoning in humans and animals, or it can be taken intentionally as poison to commit suicide. We present a case of a 35-year-old suicidal man who developed prolonged apnea for almost 4 hours on day 13 of OP poisoning after brief general anesthesia induced by propofol and 1 mg/kg of suxamethonium, during the first session of the third cycle of modified electroconvulsive therapy, despite all due precautions. Such prolonged apnea secondary to complex interactions has been reported very rarely in literature. This case therefore, highlights the importance of careful evaluation and monitoring while giving anesthesia to OP-poisoning patients.


Indian journal of social psychiatry | 2016

Association between childhood abuse and psychiatric morbidities among hospitalized patients

Kshirod Kumar Mishra; Ramdas Sarjerao Ransing; Praveen Khairkar; Sakekar Gajanan

Background: Childhood abuse has been linked with increased risk of adult psychiatric disorders including major depression, substance abuse, anxiety disorders, posttraumatic stress disorder, and personality disorders. However, only a few from India attempted to study long-term consequences of childhood abuse. Our study aimed to understand the role of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse along with psychiatric co-morbidities in hospitalized patients. Materials and Methods: Patients admitted to psychiatric inpatient services in the age group of 14-45 years for the 1 st time were evaluated for a history of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse on the basis of retrospective chart review. Semi-structured Performa was used to evaluate the patient with a history of child abuse, and they were diagnosed according to International Classification of Diseases-10 diagnostic criteria. Result: The prevalence of child abuse in our inpatient services was 43.29%; emotional abuse (61.9%) was most commonly reported among patient followed by physical (21.43%) and sexual abuse (16.67%). We observed a significant difference in terms of length of hospital stay between abuse (10.29 ± 6.01 days) and nonabuse group (5.90 ± 2.43 days) (t = 4.902, df = 95, P < 0.0001). The boys experienced physical abuse at a younger age (7.43 ± 2.50 years) than girls (13.50 ± 0.70 years). The sexual abuse and emotional abuse were reported at a younger age in girls than boys. We found high prevalence of substance use disorders (40.47%), psychosis (19.04%), and mood disorder (28.57%) among abuse group. Conclusions: The study findings highlight the developing importance of the different forms of abuse on adult psychiatric diagnosis in India. The abused patients are at high risk of the development of psychiatric disorder than the nonabuse group. The increased length of hospitalization among abused group reflects severity and complexity of child abuse. The early detection of social factors contributing to child abuse may be helpful in the prevention of child abuse. Further research is warranted in longitudinal prospective for better understanding the impact of child abuse on psychiatric diagnosis in Indian settings.


International Journal of Std & Aids | 2014

Genital self-mutilation in a suicide attempt: a rare sequela of a hypochondriacal delusion of infection with HIV.

Kshirod Kumar Mishra; Srikanth Reddy; Praveen Khairkar

Genital self-mutilation is mostly seen among psychotic, affective and gender identity disorder(s). We present here a rare case report of such genital self-mutilation in a person with a hypochondriacal delusion of infection with HIV precipitated by erroneous and anxiety-provoking miscommunication during HIV testing. Such cases remind us of the need for systematic and appropriate pre-test and post-test HIV counseling, to help prevent such outcomes.


Indian Journal of Pharmacology | 2013

Zotepine-induced convulsive seizures in a chronic case of treatment resistant paranoid schizophrenia

Praveen Khairkar; Neha Gupta; Sushil Kumar Varma

Adverse effects to antipsychotics are varied, frequently intolerable, often serious and sometimes fatal in clinical practice. Seizures are one of these adverse effects. Almost all first and second generation antipsychotics elicit dose-dependent lowering of seizure threshold, indicating increased seizure risk at higher drug dosages. The adverse event of zotepine induced seizure is published in few case reports. We report the occurrence of myoclonic seizure progressing to generalized tonic-clonic seizures with zotepine along with clear temporal association of dose dependent modulation evident in this case.


Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice | 2018

Impact of spectral severity of alcoholism on visual-evoked potentials: A neuropsychiatric perspective

Ruchi Kothari; Praveen Khairkar; Sneh Babhulkar; Pradeep Bokariya

Background: The deleterious effects of alcohol on the brain are replete in literature. Only a few neurophysiologic measures can pick up the neuronal dysfunctions, one of them being visual-evoked potential (VEP). A very limited amount of data exists on the progression of neural abnormalities related to the spectral severity of alcoholism. Aim of the Study: To evaluate the impact of spectral severity of alcoholism through VEP and to understand the emergence of any specific pattern or morphometric abnormalities related to alcohol-induced neuropsychiatric presentations. Methodology: A total of 90 cases were recruited in addition to 180 age- and sex-matched controls using purposive and random sampling. The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders, Clinician Version and Campbell Neuropsychiatric Inventory were used to evaluate alcohol disorders and its neuropsychiatric complications apart from the mandatory consultant-specific clinical evaluations of all the cases. Of 90 cases of alcohol dependence, 15 patients were currently abstinent for >6 months, 15 had alcohol intoxication, 15 had signs of alcohol withdrawal, 15 had physical complications, 15 had psychiatric comorbidity, and 15 had neurological complications such as epilepsy. VEP recordings were taken using an Evoked Potential Recorder (RMS EMG. EP MARK II) where the stimulus configuration consisted of transient pattern-reversal method in which a black and white checkerboard was generated full field. Results: Mean age of cases was 37.71 ± 11.49 years compared to 39.43 ± 10.67 years in controls (range 18–65 years). VEP abnormalities comprising of prolonged latencies (62.5%) with a statistically significant difference (P < 0.001) from the healthy controls was observed in cases of alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Predominant amplitude reduction with normal latency was obtained in 37.5% cases of withdrawal. Severe VEP abnormalities, i.e., both latency delay and amplitude reduction, were found in 75% patients with psychiatric comorbidity, 66.67% patients with neurological complications, i.e., epilepsy, and 33.34% patients with physical complications. An explicit finding of prominent interocular differences was a prominent feature present in 25% of patients with complications.


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2017

Potential Bedside Utility of the Clock-Drawing Test in Evaluating Rapid Therapeutic Response in the Natural Course of Schizophrenia: A Preliminary Study

Ramdas Sarjerao Ransing; Praveen Khairkar; Kshirod Kumar Mishra; Gajanan Sakekar

The Clock-Drawing Test (CDT) is a brief, relatively time-efficient, easy to administer at bedside, and well-proven cognitive screening test that assesses a broad range of cognitive abilities in stroke, delirium, and dementia. However, challenges of comprehensive therapeutic outcome evaluations in schizophrenia can also be potentially overcome using CDT. The authors aimed to measure the therapeutic outcome using CDT in 101 schizophrenia patients, irrespective of their diagnostic subtypes. A repeated measures analysis of variance found that improvements on CDT and the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale were closely correlated, reflecting critical information about therapeutic response measures in schizophrenia.


Industrial Psychiatry Journal | 2017

Atypical waveform morphology in schizophrenia-visual evoked potential as a promising endophenotype

Ruchi Kothari; Sneh Babhulkar; Praveen Khairkar

Background: Electrophysiological research has provided measures of dysfunction of visual pathway in schizophrenia through the use of visual evoked potential (VEP) as the neurophysiologic tool. Objective: The main objective of this study is to examine the morphology and topography of VEP responses in schizophrenic patients and to explore the potentiality of VEP as an endophenotype. Materials and Methods: The study included 20 patients of schizophrenia who were recruited from the outpatient and inpatient department of psychiatry of a tertiary care rural hospital. The patients were assessed by tools such as Positive and Negative Symptoms Assessment Scale and Clinical Global Impression Scale for Severity. Transient Pattern Reversal VEP recordings were taken using an Evoked Potential Recorder (RMS EMG EP MARK II), and it was a cross-sectional study. Results: The mean age of patients was 45.95 ± 10.14 years in the range of 35–60 years. Qualitative analysis of VEP waveforms in people with schizophrenia was performed. Abnormal waveform morphology was observed in 14/20 (70%) of the study population and all of them were the chronic and severe cases. Six out of 15 (40%) showed lack of differentiation of the evoked complex so that the three waves (negative–positive-negative [NPN] complex) could not be identified. In 5 of 15 (33.33%) VEP records, a distinct altered waveform with extinguished second negative component of NPN complex was obtained. Conclusion: Qualitative morphometric findings of this study in terms of pattern-reversal VEP waveform abnormalities emerged as a tool to provide evidence of relationship for emerging as first potential biomarker for diagnosing schizophrenia.

Collaboration


Dive into the Praveen Khairkar's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kshirod Kumar Mishra

Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Srikanth Reddy

Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ajit Avasthi

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M Thirunavukarasu

SRM Medical College Hospital and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Narendra Saoji

Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Naresh Nebhinani

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nidhi Chauhan

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Prakash B Behere

Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pranob K Dalal

King George's Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. Thara

Schizophrenia Research Foundation

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge