J
Jai Kumar Mahajan
Researcher at Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research
Publications - 80
Citations - 868
Jai Kumar Mahajan is an academic researcher from Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Urethra & Colostomy. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 73 publications receiving 775 citations. Previous affiliations of Jai Kumar Mahajan include Boston Children's Hospital & Lady Hardinge Medical College.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Anorectal malformations in children
TL;DR: There was a significant association between presence of an associated defect and mortality and morbidity, and females had intermediate defects more frequently, rectovestibular fistula being the commonest defect.
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Testosterone therapy in microphallic hypospadias: topical or parenteral?
TL;DR: This study failed to show any significant difference between the 2 routes of administration of intramuscular versus topical testosterone application, although significant penile enlargement was observed in 60% children in group A and 75% in group B.
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Congenital pouch colon revisited
Rajiv Chadha,Deepak Bagga,Deepak Bagga,Jai Kumar Mahajan,Jai Kumar Mahajan,Sanjay Sen Gupta,Sanjay Sen Gupta +6 more
TL;DR: The authors' recent experience with the study of the presentation, the pathological anatomy, and results of management of congenital pouch colon (CPC) malformations is presented and the possible embryogenesis of this condition is discussed.
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A randomized study of surgical site infiltration with bupivacaine or ketamine for pain relief in children following cleft palate repair.
TL;DR: Wound infiltration with ketamine reduces postoperative pain after tonsillectomy by NMDA receptor blockade and local anesthetic effect.
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An audit of neonatal colostomy for high anorectal malformation: the developing world perspective.
S. K. Chowdhary,G. Chalapathi,K. L. Narasimhan,Ram Samujh,Jai Kumar Mahajan,Prema Menon,Kln Rao +6 more
TL;DR: Sick, small and septic babies arriving late to the unit do not appear to tolerate general anaesthesia and divided sigmoid colostomy well, despite that procedure’s long-term advantages, but in the context of the developing world and limited critical care availability, transverse loop colstomy under local anaesthesia may save lives.