Metropolis Healthcare LTD

Metropolis Healthcare LTD Tata 1mg Labs is a venture of Tata to re define Diagnostics
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29/07/2015
15/06/2015

23 percent samples test positive for Lead Poisoning at Metropolis Healthcare in last one year.

30/12/2014

Ms Ameera Shah,MD & CEO, Metropolis Healthcare, was invited as a Guest Speaker at the Annual Corporate Event conducted by Nasree Monjee Institute of Management Studies. She addressed an enthusiastic crowd of over 300 students who were on their way to a corporate career or build a start-up.

The theme of the event was aptly described ‘Changing Dreams in to Reality’. Ms Ameera Shah spoke at length on her entrepreneurial journey and inspired young minds to chase their dreams. She focused how failure is not the end of the journey but is only a learning curve and makes one a better business person.

The session was followed by an intense QnA session wherein Ms Shah deliberated on many nuances of running a successful business.

NMIMS is a Top Global Premier University located in Mumbai. Today, it stands as a large imposing University with 9 specialized schools plus two off-Campus operations, with an intake of over 6000 students and over 430 full time faculty members.

22/09/2014

Metropolis launches Multiplex PCR test to detect any of seven diseases causing fever

August 28, 2014,
Metropolis Healthcare Ltd, a leading multinational chain of diagnostic centres, has launched India’s first single test for seven diseases which cause fever. The Multiplex PCR test helps diagnose seven common diseases causing fevers Malaria, Dengue, Typhoid, Leptospirosis, Chikungunya, West Nile Fever and Rickettsia. The test is seen to save cost and provide doctors to help faster diagnosis.

The Multiple PCR is done in real-time which extract nucleic acid of pathogens from whole blood. With a sensitivity and specificity of a 100 per cent , the test looks to provide a breather in terms of diagnosis to a country where according to certain estimates, 80 per cent of all illnesses are water-related.

According to Dr. Nilesh Shah, Group president scientific service & operation, SBU Head West India, Metropolis Healthcare the effort is eliminate infectious diseases. The test ensures earliest possible detection compared to all the conventional tests available.. Multiplex PCR test is expected to significantly facilitate fever screening and therefore speed up identification of patients suffering from various symptoms of infectious disease.

Patients suffering from high fever are often put through a battery of tests to detect the cause of fever, leading to a delay in treatment. In a sphere as critical as healthcare, time thus becomes of prime importance, and this is the lacunae that Metropolis Healthcare looks to fill, in its efforts to make diagnostic dilemma obsolete.

Metropolis undertakes over 15 million tests a year, catering to over 10,000 labs, hospitals nursing homes and two lakh consultants. It is the only multinational chain of diagnostic centres with presence in UAE, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Kenya, Mauritius and Ghana. Its network includes 105 laboratories across India with over 700 collection centres, processing over 4500 varieties of tests and supported a team of over 3000 personnel.

10/08/2014
31/01/2014

Researchers Create Embryonic Stem Cells Without Embryo
Discovery of a novel reprogramming method of adult cells could shift stem cell research.

By Lori J. Schroth, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Communications ,Harvard University | January 30, 2014
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Researchers have demonstrated that any mature adult cell has the potential to turn into the equivalent of an embryonic stem cell. “It may not be necessary to create an embryo to acquire embryonic stem cells," explained senior author Charles Vacanti, who is the Vandam/Covino Professor of Anaesthesia at Harvard Medical School.PHOTO CREDIT: KRIS SNIBBE/HARVARD STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSince the discovery of human embryonic stem cells, scientists have had high hopes for their use in treating a wider variety of diseases because they are “pluripotent,” which means they are capable of differentiating into one of many cell types in the body.

However, the acquisition of human embryonic stem cells from an embryo can cause the destruction of the embryo, thus raising ethical concerns. In 2006, researchers introduced an alternative to harvesting embryonic stem cells called induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. They provided evidence that it was possible to send a normal adult cell back to an undifferentiated, pluripotent stem cell state by introducing genetic material (“outside” DNA) into the cell, a process that alters the original state of the cell.

To avoid the use of embryonic stem cells, other researchers have focused more on the use of adult stem cells, but the use of these cells is limited because, unlike embryonic stem cells that grow into any type of mature cell, adult stem cells can only grow into certain cell types.

Now, researchers from Harvard University-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), in collaboration with the RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology in Japan, have demonstrated that any mature adult cell (a “somatic” cell) has the potential to turn into the equivalent of an embryonic stem cell. In an article to be published in the Jan. 30 issue of Nature, researchers demonstrate, in a preclinical model, a novel and unique way that cells can be reprogrammed, a phenomenon they call stimulus-triggered acquisition of pluripotency (STAP). Importantly, this process does not require the introduction of new outside DNA, the process commonly used to induce adult cells back into a state of pluripotentency.

“It may not be necessary to create an embryo to acquire embryonic stem cells. Our research findings demonstrate that creation of an autologous pluripotent stem cell — a stem cell from an individual that has the potential to be used for a therapeutic purpose without an embryo — is possible. The fate of adult cells can be drastically converted by exposing mature cells to an external stress or injury. This finding has the potential to reduce the need to utilize both embryonic stem cells and DNA-manipulated iPS cells,” said senior author Charles Vacanti, chairman of the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine and director of the Laboratory for Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine at BWH. “This study would not have been possible without the significant international collaboration between BWH and the RIKEN Center,” he added.

Researchers, drawing from the ability of a plant callus — a node of plant cells that is created by injuring an existing plant — to grow into a new plant, hypothesized that any mature adult cell, once differentiated into a specific cell type, could be de-differentiated through a natural process that does not require inserting genetic material into the cells.

“Could simple injury cause mature, adult cells to turn into stem cells that could in turn develop into any cell type?” hypothesized Vacanti.

Beginning with mature adult cells, researchers let them multiply. After stressing the cells almost to the point of death by exposing them to stresses including trauma, a low oxygen environment, and an acidic environment, researchers discovered that within a period of only a few days, the cells survived and recovered from the stressful stimulus by naturally reverting into a state that is equivalent to an embryonic stem cell. The stem cells created by exposure to the external stimuli were then able to redifferentiate and mature into any type of cell and grow into any type of tissue, depending on the environment into which they were placed.

To examine the growth potential of these cells, researchers used mature blood cells from mice that had been genetically altered with a specific mutation to light up green under a specific wavelength of light. They stressed the cells from the blood by exposing them to an acidic environment and found that in the days following the stress, those cells reverted back to an embryonic stem cell-like state.

Researchers hypothesize that these findings raise the possibility that unknown cellular functions that are activated through external stress may set mature adult cells free from their current commitment and permit them to revert to their naïve cell state.

“Our findings suggest that somehow, through part of a natural repair process, mature cells turn off some of the epigenetic controls that inhibit expression of certain nuclear genes that result in differentiation,” said Vacanti, who is the Vandam/Covino Professor of Anaesthesia at Harvard Medical School.

Researchers note that the next step is to explore this process in more sophisticated mammals and ultimately in humans.

“If we can work out the mechanisms by which differentiation states are maintained and lost, it could open up a wide range of possibilities for new research and applications using living cells. But for me, the most interesting questions will be the ones that let us gain a deeper understanding of the basic principles at work in these phenomena,” said first author Haruko Obokata, a research fellow in anesthesiology at BWH.

If this same process can be demonstrated in human cells, then someday, through a skin biopsy or blood sample, without the need for genetic manipulation, researchers may be able to create embryonic stem cells specific to each individual, which in turn could be used to create tissue without the need to insert any outside genetic material into that cell, creating endless possibilities for therapeutic options.

This was adapted by Harvard University from a Brigham and Women’s Hospital relea

15/01/2014
26/06/2013

Metro Complete Body Check Up @ Rs 1100 only=, includes FBS,CBC,Lipid Profile,LFT,KFT,Calcium and Phosphorus,Urine etc
Till 15 July 2013
Muzaffarrnagar Metropolis Branch

25/10/2012

The summer may have been delayed in large parts of the country but is here finally and so are skin problems such as acne, rashes, sunburn and tanning.

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