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"BHARAT IS THE ONLY COUNTRY IN WORLD WHERE CHILDRENS REGARDS TO ELDER THROUGH TOUCH THE FEET'
By IANS
Monday September 24, 04:15 PM
Sydney, Sep 24 (IANS) Indian-born Australian doctor Vini Gautam
Khurana and his team at Canberra Hospital have performed the world's
first awake brain keyhole surgery to remove a life-threatening
aneurysm or a large blister from a patient's brain.
'We believe it is the first time that this kind of aneurysm and
malformation have been shut down through a keyhole approach in an
awake patient assisted by cutting-edge technology,' said Khurana
after operating on a 77-year-old man suffering malformation in a
major vein in his brain, behind his right eye, that was impairing his
vision.
Khurana said the keyhole surgery, performed through a 1.5cm hole
drilled into the patient's skull with the patient comfortably awake
during the critical parts of the surgery, was so successful that the
patient was able to leave the hospital within a few days with a
marked improvement in his vision.
'We had rehearsed the surgical approach using specialist imaging
software to understand the anatomy of the malformation and their
relationship to the skull base,' said Khurana.
US-trained Khurana, who migrated to Australia in 1973, belongs to a
family of doctors. Both his parents were doctors and his brother is a
Fulbright scholar at Harvard studying Neurology.
'I was two-and-half years old, when we migrated to Australia, but our
roots are very much Indian and we have strong links back home. I am
looking forward to more interaction with premier Indian hospitals
like the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New
Delhi. My parents were trained at AIIMS'.
'We have started an Awake Brain Surgery Programme for high risk
vascular and tumour conditions of the brain following the success of
the surgery,' said Khurana, who is a staff specialist neurosurgeon at
the Canberra Hospital and Associate Professor of Neurosurgery for
Australian National University Medical School.
'We've also applied for permission to conduct surgery and teach at
the Saibaba Charitable hospital in Bangalore', said Khurana
Ravi Satpal
(CA (Final) & CS (Executive) Student)
(2430 Points)
Replied 18 June 2008
Vinod Dham one who invented intel pentium proccessor, born in India and made a shining mark for India.
The land of dreams and romance, of fabulous wealth and fabulous poverty, of splendour and rags, of palaces and hovels, of famine and pestilence, of genii and giants and Aladdin lamps, of tigers and elephants, the cobra and the jungle, the country of hundred nations and a hundred tongues, of a thousand religions and two million gods, cradle of the human race, birthplace of human speech, mother of history, grandmother of legend, great-grandmother of traditions, whose yesterday's bear date with the modering antiquities for the rest of nations-the one sole country under the sun that is endowed with an imperishable interest for alien prince and alien peasant, for lettered and ignorant, wise and fool, rich and poor, bond and free, the one land that all men desire to see, and having seen once, by even a glimpse, would not give that glimpse for the shows of all the rest of the world combined.
~~~ Mark Twain
Friday 28th of September 2007
American astronaut of Indian origin Sunita Williams said here Friday that she was ready to associate with Indian space missions to moon and beyond.
'I will definitely participate in missions
The 42-year-old space woman also expressed her willingness to assist the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) in its proposed manned mission with the wealth of experience she gained orbiting the earth from the International Space Station (ISS) for over six months this year.
'Though I am presently working with the US military as a naval officer and am an astronaut with the US space programme, I will consider it a privilege and honour to offer my expertise and share what I have learnt in such scientific and exploratory missions,' Sunita asserted.
Even though she would love to go back to space again and again, Sunita said she would rather allow others to go, as there were more folks out there waiting for a chance like her.
'Having been up there once, I would like to see others go. And when
'If more people go to space, are able to work in this sphere and see how our planet looks like, with a 3-D (three dimension) effect of the darkness of space, we will have a lot more people coming back, relaying the different sections on the earth and making people understand that we are really a borderless world and can live together peacefully,' Sunita said.
Recounting her experiences on board the ISS and their domino effect on her outlook, Sunita said though such missions were challenging and dangerous, they were worth the risk, as they gave an opportunity to push the human spirit on the space frontier and understand the benefits of the experiments conducted in outer space.
'Space exploration involves the cutting-edge of science and technology and the spirit of human endeavour. By taking up space journeys, we are pushing the edge of science and technology, which has spin-off applications. Such missions make people think out of box.
'Earth is two-dimensional (2-D) when viewed from here, but is three-dimensional when seen from space. Going into space is absolutely necessary and is the right thing to do,' Sunita said.
Asked whether space colonies would emerge for the survival of human race and to sustain life on earth, she said such a possibility might arise if the world is burdened with more people and the resources deplete.
'I don't have the magic crystal ball to predict whether and when human colonies would come up though eminent physicist Stephen Hawking hinted about them in his book (The Brief of History Time).
'I think we need to look into the mirror and understand what we are doing to earth and whether we can sustain our planet by adding people at the current rate. We need to, however, do the space exploration to have the ground work so that we can sustain the human race and allow life to continue,' Sunita added.
PROUD TO BE AN INDIAN
CA Rajesh S
(Chartered Accountant)
(1581 Points)
Replied 07 July 2008
very proud to be an INDIAN!!!!!!