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Dive into the research topics where Vinay Kumaran is active.

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Featured researches published by Vinay Kumaran.


International journal of hepatology | 2011

Indications and Contraindications for Liver Transplantation

Vibha Varma; Naimish Mehta; Vinay Kumaran; Samiran Nundy

Patients with chronic liver disease and certain patients with acute liver failure require liver transplantation as a life-saving measure. Liver transplantation has undergone major improvements, with better selection of candidates for transplantation and allocation of scarce deceased donor organs (according to more objective criteria). Living donor liver transplantation came into existence to overcome the shortage of donor organs especially in countries where there was virtually no deceased donor programme. Advances in the technical aspects of the procedure, the intraoperative and postoperative care of both recipients and donors, coupled with the introduction of better immunosuppression protocols, have led to graft and patient survivals of over 90% in most high volume centres. Controversial areas like transplantation in alcoholic liver disease without abstinence, acute alcoholic hepatitis, and retransplantation for recurrent hepatitis C virus infection require continuing discussion.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2010

Evolution of a reliable biliary reconstructive technique in 400 consecutive living donor liver transplants.

Arvinder Singh Soin; Vinay Kumaran; Amit Rastogi; Ravi Mohanka; Naimish Mehta; Sanjiv Saigal; Neeraj Saraf; Neelam Mohan; Samiran Nundy

BACKGROUND Biliary complications (BCs) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT). They occur because the graft hepatic ducts are often small, thin walled, multiple, and may become ischemic during transection. STUDY DESIGN Of the 460 LDLTs done at our center before November 2009, the first 402 partial liver grafts had at least 3 months of follow-up. In the first 158, conventional hepatic duct isolation was used in the donor (group C). In the last 244 cases, the complete hilar plate and Glissonian sheath approach (HPGS) was used (group H). We compared the incidence and outcomes of BCs in the 2 groups. RESULTS The rate of BC was significantly lower in group H (5.3%) than in group C (15.8%, p = 0.000). The incidence of early (within 3 months of transplant) BCs was similarly significantly lower in group H (3.3%) than in group C (13.2%, P=0.000). The incidence of late BCs in the 145 patients in group H who had completed at least 12 months of follow-up was 2.8%.The proportion of BCs needing surgical correction was much higher in group C (44%) than in group H (7.7%, p = 0.022). CONCLUSIONS By providing a graft with a well-vascularized hepatic duct or ducts with a sheath of supporting tissue that holds sutures well, the HPGS approach minimizes the incidence and severity of BCs in LDLT.


Applied Mathematics and Computation | 2009

MHD flow past a stretching permeable sheet

Vinay Kumaran; Avisekh Banerjee; A. Vanav Kumar; K. Vajravelu

An exact solution is obtained for a boundary layer flow of an electrically conducting fluid past a quadratically stretching, and linearly permeable sheet. Effects of magnetic, suction/injection, linear/nonlinear stretching parameters on the stream function and the skin friction are shown graphically and are discussed. The results obtained reveal many interesting behaviors that warrant further study of the equations related to non-Newtonian fluid phenomena, especially the shear-thinning phenomena. Shear thinning reduces the wall shear stress.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2013

Steatohepatitic Hepatocellular Carcinoma, a Morphologic Indicator of Associated Metabolic Risk Factors: A Study From India

Deepali Jain; Nabeen C. Nayak; Vinay Kumaran; Sanjiv Saigal

CONTEXT The common risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) include persistent viral infection with either hepatitis B or C virus, alcohol abuse, hemochromatosis, and metabolic syndrome. Steatohepatitic (SH) HCC has been recently recognized as a special morphologic variant of HCC associated with metabolic risk factors. OBJECTIVE To assess the SH pattern in HCC cases of various etiologies in Indian patients and to further correlate this morphology with the presence of metabolic risk factors. DESIGN A total of 101 cases of HCC with various etiologies in explanted livers from adults were included in the study. Morphologic examination was performed to identify SH lesions within the tumor and in the nontumorous liver parenchyma. Correlation of nontumor and tumor SH morphology with clinically identifiable metabolic risk factors and with non-SH type of HCC was performed. RESULTS The SH variant of HCC was identified in 19 livers (18.8%). Most SH-HCC cases were associated with metabolic risk factors such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemias. Comparison of SH-HCC with non-SH-HCC was statistically significant in terms of presence of metabolic risk factors. CONCLUSIONS Steatohepatitic morphology in HCC is frequent in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease-associated cirrhosis (P = .009) and is significantly associated with metabolic risk factors (P = .03). By recognizing SH pattern, one may predict associated metabolic diseases and determine the prognosis both in pretransplant and posttransplant patients.


Hpb | 2012

Portal biliopathy in patients with non-cirrhotic portal hypertension: does the type of surgery affect outcome?

Somnath Chattopadhyay; Mahendran Govindasamy; Punit Singla; Vibha Varma; Naimish Mehta; Vinay Kumaran; Samiran Nundy

OBJECTIVES After portosystemic anastomoses for biliopathy, some patients continue to suffer biliary obstruction. The effects of splenectomy and devascularization of the abdominal oesophagus and upper stomach are unclear. The aim of the current study was to determine the features of portal biliopathy (PB) in patients with non-cirrhotic portal hypertension, and to investigate outcomes in these patients after surgical procedures. METHODS A retrospective study of 56 patients who underwent surgery for PB during 1996-2010 was conducted. Data on presenting features, treatment received and outcomes were analysed. RESULTS In total, 41 of these patients had extrahepatic portal venous obstruction and 15 had non-cirrhotic portal fibrosis. Forty patients underwent shunt surgery and 16 underwent splenectomy and devascularization. Median bilirubin levels fell from 1.8 mg/dl (range: 0.4-5.9 mg/dl) to 1.0 mg/dl (range: 0.3-5.4 mg/dl) after shunt surgery and from 1.9 mg/dl (range: 0.6-4.0 mg/dl) to 1.2 mg/dl (range: 0.6-5.2 mg/dl) after splenectomy-devascularization. On follow-up, five of 33 patients had persistent jaundice after successful shunt surgery. These patients had a history of multiple endoscopic stentings and three patients had demonstrated a dominant common bile duct stricture preoperatively. CONCLUSIONS Portal biliopathy was reversed in 38 of 43 patients by either portosystemic shunting or splenectomy-devascularization. In five patients, direct biliary decompressive procedures were required because of shunt blockage or a non-reversible biliary stricture.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2013

Hepatic Artery Pseudoaneurysms: A Single-Center Experience

Raghavendra Nagaraja; Mahendran Govindasamy; Vibha Varma; Amitabh Yadav; Naimish Mehta; Vinay Kumaran; Arun Gupta; Samiran Nundy

BACKGROUND The management of hepatic artery aneurysms has evolved largely because of changes in etiology and presentation, and advances in endovascular therapy. Although many case reports have been published on the condition, few have been from developing countries and few have compared patient outcomes after angioembolization and surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS This study retrospectively analyzed patients admitted with hepatic artery pseudoaneurysms between 1999 and 2011. The patients were divided into those who presented before 2007 (surgery group) and after 2007 (embolization group), and their demographic characteristics, presentation, and investigations; the technical and clinical success of treatment; and in-hospital mortality were studied. RESULTS A total of 29 patients were studied, 17 of whom men, with a median age of 42 years. Of these 29 patients, 8 underwent surgery and 21 had embolization (24 total procedures). No mortality was seen in the surgery group, and their hospital stay was longer and transfusion requirement higher than those in the embolization group, in whom technical success was achieved in all procedures and clinical success in 19 of 24 (79%). Clinical failure and complications were seen when common hepatic artery aneurysms were embolized. Three patients (14%) died in the embolization group from ischemic hepatitis and bowel gangrene, coagulopathy, and a leak from a previous pancreaticojejunal anastomosis. CONCLUSIONS Both surgery and angioembolization are equally effective for hepatic artery pseudoaneurysms, but the latter has the advantages of more rapid bleeding control, shorter hospital stay, and lower transfusion requirement.


Indian Journal of Gastroenterology | 2012

Gastrointestinal mucormycosis—four cases with different risk factors, involving different anatomical sites

Shailendra Lalwani; Mahendran Govindasamy; Manoj Gupta; Fouzia Siraj; Vibha Varma; Naimaish Mehta; Vinay Kumaran; Neelam Mohan; Prem Chopra; Anil Arora; Shyam Agarwal; Arvinder Singh Soin; Samiran Nundy

Mucormycosis of the gastrointestinal tract is a rare infection that usually occurs in patients who are immunocompromised and carries a high mortality. We report four cases of gastrointestinal mucormycosis seen over a one year period with different presentations, risk factors and different anatomical sites of involvement. A preoperative diagnosis was made only in one patient. All underwent surgery, three survived and one died postoperatively from multiorgan failure.


Journal of clinical and experimental hepatology | 2014

Role of liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma.

Vinay Kumaran

This review evaluates the available evidence to establish the role of liver transplantation in the management of hepatocellular carcinoma in India. Most liver transplants in India are living donor transplants due to the paucity of brain dead organ donors. There is sufficient evidence to permit allocation of organs to patients with tumors within the Milan criteria. If the waiting list time is more than 6 months, a down-staging locoregional treatment modality such a trans-arterial chemoembolization, radiofrequency ablation, resection or percutaneous ethanol injection may be used to prevent disease progression. Allocating scarce livers to patients with more advanced tumors may not be justifiable. However, living donor liver transplantation may be offered to medically fit patients with hepatocellular carcinoma with cirrhosis, offering a guarded prognosis to patients beyond the Milan or UCSF criteria. Vascular invasion and extra-hepatic disease should be absolute contraindications to liver transplantation.


Surgery | 2010

Bridge venoplasty: A new technique to simplify venous outflow reconstruction in living donor domino liver transplantation

Arvinder Singh Soin; Vinay Kumaran; Ravi Mohanka; Naimish Mehta; Neelam Mohan; Samiran Nundy

IN DOMINO LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, when the first recipient or the domino donor (DD) receives a living donor (LD) graft, both transplants are performed in an inferior vena cava (IVC) preserving piggyback fashion. The main technical challenge lies in ensuring a well-constructed venous outflow in the second (domino) recipient (DR) because the right hepatic vein (RHV), middle hepatic vein (MHV), and left hepatic vein (LHV) present as separate orifices in the domino graft. The techniques used to reconstitute venous outflow in the DR include anastomosis of hepatic vein stumps to circular venotomies in a vein patch or Y-grafts using either portal vein bifurcation or cadaveric iliac vein confluence. We describe a new method using a cryopreserved portal vein graft, which is split open and used as a vein patch to bridge the gap between the RHV and the common channel of MHV and LHV. This simple technique (Fig 1, A--C) permits a wide, triangulated outflow anastomosis (Fig 2) in which the natural lie of hepatic veins is preserved.


Journal of Pharmacy and Bioallied Sciences | 2015

Digital model as an alternative to plaster model in assessment of space analysis.

A Anand Kumar; Abraham Phillip; S Sathesh Kumar; Anuradha Rawat; Sakthi Priya; Vinay Kumaran

Introduction: Digital three-dimensional models are widely used for orthodontic diagnosis. The purpose of this study was to appraise the accuracy of digital models obtained from computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) and cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) for tooth-width measurements and the Bolton analysis. Materials and Methods: Digital models (CAD/CAM, CBCT) and plaster model were made for each of 50 subjects. Tooth-width measurements on the digital models (CAD/CAM, CBCT) were compared with those on the corresponding plaster models. The anterior and overall Bolton ratios were calculated for each participant and for each method. The paired t-test was applied to determine the validity. Results: Tooth-width measurements, anterior, and overall Bolton ratio of digital models of CAD/CAM and CBCT did not differ significantly from those on the plaster models. Conclusion: Hence, both CBCT and CAD/CAM are trustable and promising technique that can replace plaster models due to its overwhelming advantages.

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Samiran Nundy

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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A. Vanav Kumar

National Institute of Technology

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Arvinder Singh Soin

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Avisekh Banerjee

National Institute of Technology

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Deepali Jain

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Fouzia Siraj

Indian Council of Medical Research

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R. Tamizharasi

National Institute of Technology

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K. Vajravelu

University of Central Florida

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Afaq Ahmad Khan

Sher-I-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences

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