Ritesh Agarwal

3.3K posts

Ritesh Agarwal

Ritesh Agarwal

@riteshpgi

Professor of Pulmonary Medicine at PGI, Chandigarh. Research interests in allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis and interventional pulmonology.

India Katılım Haziran 2012
227 Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
Ritesh Agarwal retweetledi
Oliver Cornely
Oliver Cornely@CornelyOliver·
If no reviewer is found, then editor should review her/himself.
Ferry Hagen 🔬🧫🧬@ferryhagen

@SalmantonGarcia It is. For those who act as Editor: What if none of 20+ invited reviewers is willing to review the manuscript? Or how to handle manuscripts of which the authors/corresponding authors apparently always deny review invitations?

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JP Gangneux
JP Gangneux@GangneuxJp·
Very excited to welcome all specialists on Aspergillus and Mucorales from all over the world in Milano 🇮🇹, January 2024. Submit your abstract now! See the fantastic programme 🤓 #AAAM24
Advances Against Aspergillosis and Mucormycosis@AAAMConference

Abstract submissions for #AAAM24 are officially open! 📣 Submit your abstract by 31st December 2023 to be considered for a presentation. More info here 👉 ow.ly/qjWQ50PR6LK #AAAM #Aspergillus #Murcormycosis #mycology #healthcare #MedTwitter #fungalinfection #fungi

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Dinesh S. Thakur
Dinesh S. Thakur@d_s_thakur·
Not to nitpick how people feel about @theliverdoc's responses, let me say this from personal experience. When you see something that kills your patients, not for their ignorance or mistakes, but because of pseudoscience, it eats you from within. He is a doctor, someone who 1/n
Rakesh Nayak@OdiSriUS

The intention behind the second point is that 'what you (not I) may consider as rude is, in fact, a common behavior among scientists. they are direct and their comments are evidence-based.' :)

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Tweetuhtwit
Tweetuhtwit@tweetuhtwit·
@Dalbodog So, so sorry for your loss. 😢🌈
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Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
Incredible performance
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Parveen Kaswan, IFS
Parveen Kaswan, IFS@ParveenKaswan·
This is Indian Army dog Kent, a six-year-old labrador of the 21 Army Dog Unit. Today she laid down her life while shielding its handler during the operation in J&K. She was leading a column of soldiers on the trail of fleeing terrorists. Not all heroes wear capes. : Army
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Jon Cooper 🇺🇸
Jon Cooper 🇺🇸@joncoopertweets·
This is Sir Frederick Banting. He discovered insulin in 1923. But he refused to put his name on the patent. Why? Because Banting felt it was unethical to profit from a discovery that would save lives. But pharmaceutical companies made huge financial offers to Banting for the patent, knowing they could make billions. They even sweetened the deal, offering an insulin clinic, with Sir Banting in charge... a temping offer to almost doctor in his position. Banting, however, said his discovery of isolated insulin was a gift to mankind. He felt this critical medicine should be available to everyone who needed it. In 1923, Banting was just 31 years old when he was awarded the Nobel Prize. Tragically, in 1941 while flying on a plane to personally protect scientific secrets from the Nazis, his plane crashed. He was killed. Banting's co-inventors, in his honor, sold the patent for insulin to the University of Toronto for the appropriate sum they thought appropriate – one dollar. Today, 30 million Americans with diabetes rely on his gift to mankind. To honor Sir Frederick Banting, it should remain a gift to mankind.
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James D Chalmers
James D Chalmers@ProfJDChalmers·
Eosinophilic patients with bronchiectasis receiving inhaled steroid have a 30% reduction in exacerbations and 50% lower hospitalisations in the EMBARC bronchiectasis registry Great work from the amazing @thephdproject_ Jennifer Pollock #bronchiectasis #ERSCongress #proud
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Sujata Rege ID
Sujata Rege ID@sujrege·
Errors in medical mycology. Engaging panel focussing on righting the wrongs (rather than sweeping under the rug) wonderful as always Dr RGK, Dr Tanu Singhal @AskSubramanian @LassFlrl @pascalisID @FisfTrust Mycocon 2023, Pune
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James D Chalmers
James D Chalmers@ProfJDChalmers·
Huge genetic variation in pseudomonas isolated from patients with bronchiectasis which is linked to bacterial behaviour We need to think about variation in the bug as well as the patient for assessment /endotyping More data from the EMBARC study #ERSCongress @beccahull_
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Smriti Rana
Smriti Rana@SmritiRana0702·
If this is how doctors want end of life to look like for themselves, why do they choose differently for patients in their care?
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