Swamy Ramanandha Thirtha Instituite of Pharmaceutical Sciences

Swamy Ramanandha Thirtha Instituite of Pharmaceutical Sciences The Swami Ramananda Tirtha Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nalgonda popularly known as SRTIPS is established in the year 2007

The Swami Ramananda Tirtha Educational Society was founded in 1992 by highly qualified and experienced group of people with the sole intention of starting educational institutions for providing high standards of technical education in the backward district of Nalgonda. The society firmly believe that the technical education will play a significant role in accomplishing future productivity economic

goals and increasing the living standards throughout the world. As the pharmacy field is gaining popularity with better future perspectives, apart from engineering education, The society has started a Bachelor of pharmacy College in Nalgonda in the year 2007 with a vision to provide the students with the pharmacy education. In the very first year itself the institute has got good reputation by securing good results at their first year exams. Apart from this new initiatives are being taken to start the post graduate course in near future.

04/07/2015

Aurobindo Pharma CEO Arvind Vasudeva resigns

Drug firm Aurobindo PharmaBSE 0.27 % today said its Chief Executive Officer (Formulations) Arvind Vasudeva has resigned from the company.

"Arvind Vasudeva, Chief Executive Officer (Formulations), has resigned from the services of the company to pursue his professional interests with effect from the close of business hours on June 30, 2015," Aurobindo Pharma said in a filing to the BSE.

Recently, the drug firm had said that it intends to invest up to Rs 900 crore this fiscal on various activities including capacity expansion, clinical trials and product filings.

The company has presence in semi-synthetic penicillins and other key therapeutic segments such as neurosciences, cardiovascular, anti-retrovirals, anti-diabetics, gastroenterology and cephalosporins among others.

04/07/2015

High blood pressure linked to reduced Alzheimer's risk, meds may be reason.......

A new study suggests that people with a genetic predisposition to high blood pressure have a lower risk for Alzheimer's disease. However, authors conclude the connection may have more to do with anti-hypertension medication than high blood pressure itself.
"It's likely that this protective effect is coming from antihypertensive drugs," said co-author John Kauwe, associate professor of biology at Brigham Young University. "These drugs are already FDA approved. We need to take a serious look at them for Alzheimer's prevention."

The study, published this month in PLOS Medicine, analyzed genetic data from 17,008 individuals with Alzheimer's and 37,154 people without the disease. Data came from the Alzheimer's Disease Genetics Consortium and the International Genomics of Alzheimer's Project.

BYU researchers worked with scholars from the University of Cambridge, Aarhus University in Denmark and the University of Washington on the massive study. BYU's role was to flex its muscles in supercomputing and bioinformatics. With the help of BYU's supercomputer, Kauwe and undergraduate student Kevin Boehme pieced together 32 data sets for the analysis.

The research team looked for links between Alzheimer's disease and a number of health conditions -- including diabetes, obesity, and high cholesterol -- but only found a significant association between higher systolic blood pressure and reduced Alzheimer's risk. (A weak connection between smoking and Alzheimer's also surfaced.)

"Our results are the opposite of what people might think," said fellow co-author Paul Crane, a University of Washington associate professor of internal medicine. "It may be that high blood pressure is protective, or it may be that something that people with high blood pressure are exposed to more often, such as antihypertensive medication, is protecting them from Alzheimer's disease."

University of Cambridge senior investigator scientist Robert Scott led the study, which used "Mendelian randomization" to find if the risk factors (BMI, insulin resistance, blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes) for Alzheimer's had a causal impact. Mendelian randomization uses subjects' genetics as a proxy for a randomized clinical trial.

"This is to date the most authoritative paper looking at causal relationships between Alzheimer's disease and these potentially modifiable factors," Kauwe said. "In terms of the number of samples, it can't get bigger at this point."

Address

Swami Ramananda Tirtha Institute Of Pharmaceutical SciencesRamananda Nagar, Post S. L. B. C
Nalgonda
508001

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