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The term "sari cancer" was first used by a group of doctors led by Dr. A. S. Patil from Bombay Hospital, India, in the Bombay Hospital Journal. The dermatological problem in the waist of Indian women wearing saris had been recognised before by some other researchers.
Puestow's procedure (drawing) - Bombay Hospital Journal. This page was last edited on 24 November 2024, at 22:19 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Bombay Hospital (BHMRC; Bombay Hospital and Medical Research Centre - Mumbai) [1] is a private hospital in Mumbai, India. It was founded in 1950 by R. D. Birla. [2] It has 830 beds, 110 of which are in the critical care and recovery area. It has 22 operating theatres, 3,200 full-time employees, 240 eminent consultants and 200 resident doctors ...
Goyal was the honorary dean and chief cardiologist at the Bombay Hospital Institute of Medical Sciences and was a former Director-Professor of cardiology of JJ Group of Hospitals and Grant Medical College, Mumbai. [2] He was born in the town of Sambhar Lake, Jaipur district.
Sir Temulji Bhicaji Nariman RCSEd, also recorded as Tehmulji B. Nariman (3 September 1848 – 1 August 1940), was a obstetrician from Bombay (now Mumbai) who co-founded one of the city's first lying-in hospitals in 1887 and was knighted in 1914 for his work during the plague epidemic in India at the turn of the 19th century.
Portrait by Sorab M. Pithawalla, 1940. Sir Nasarvanji Hormusji Choksy (7 October 1861 – 1 December 1939) was an Indian medical doctor who worked in Bombay.He was titled Khan Bahadur and knighted in 1929 for his contributions to public health, particularly for his work in dealing with smallpox, leprosy, tuberculosis, and plague.
Pancreas. Frey's procedure is a surgical technique used in the treatment of chronic pancreatitis in which the diseased portions of the pancreas head are cored out. A lateral pancreaticojejunostomy (LRLPJ) is then performed in which a loop of the jejunum is then mobilized and attached over the exposed pancreatic duct to allow better drainage of the pancreas, including its head.
José Camillo Lisboa (5 March 1823 [1] – 1 May 1897) was a Portuguese-Goan physician and botanist. He was among the first Portuguese Indian physicians and graduated from the inaugural class of the Grant Medical College in Bombay.