New Delhi, Oct 7 (Ians) Avinash Sable, silver medal winner at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games 2022, and Sanjivani Jadhav, a former champion as well as the 2020 edition’s silver medallist, will spearhead a thrilling Indian line-up in the Vedanta Delhi Half Marathon, scheduled to be held here on October 16.
The Indian elite category will also see in action Abhishek Pal, winner of the 2018 edition. He is part of the Elite Distance Running Programme driven by Procam International and was also the winner of the Tcs World 10K this year in the Indian elite category.
Not just that, Pal is the newly-crowned champion in 5,000m, with a time of 14:07.25 and clinched the silver medal in 10,000m with a time of 28:54.98 at the ongoing National Games in Gujarat.
In the women’s category, Sanjivani, who won 10,000m gold at the 2022 Federation Cup athletics, will be challenged by Monika Athare, also a former champion.
The Indian elite category will also see in action Abhishek Pal, winner of the 2018 edition. He is part of the Elite Distance Running Programme driven by Procam International and was also the winner of the Tcs World 10K this year in the Indian elite category.
Not just that, Pal is the newly-crowned champion in 5,000m, with a time of 14:07.25 and clinched the silver medal in 10,000m with a time of 28:54.98 at the ongoing National Games in Gujarat.
In the women’s category, Sanjivani, who won 10,000m gold at the 2022 Federation Cup athletics, will be challenged by Monika Athare, also a former champion.
- 10/7/2022
- by Glamsham Bureau
- GlamSham
Hyderabad, Aug 14 (Ians) For the first time in India, researchers in Hyderabad have successfully 3D-printed an artificial cornea and transplanted it into a rabbit eye.
Researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute (Lvpei), Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad (Iith), and the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (Ccmb), have collaborated to develop a 3D-printed cornea from a human donor corneal tissue.
Developed indigenously through government and philanthropic funding, the product is completely natural, contains no synthetic components, is free of animal residues and is safe to use in patients, said a joint statement issued by the three research institutes.
Sayan Basu and Vivek Singh, lead researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute, believe this can be a ground-breaking and disruptive innovation in treating diseases like corneal scarring (where the cornea becomes opaque) or Keratoconus (where the cornea gradually becomes thin with time).
“It is a made-in-India product by an Indian...
Researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute (Lvpei), Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad (Iith), and the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (Ccmb), have collaborated to develop a 3D-printed cornea from a human donor corneal tissue.
Developed indigenously through government and philanthropic funding, the product is completely natural, contains no synthetic components, is free of animal residues and is safe to use in patients, said a joint statement issued by the three research institutes.
Sayan Basu and Vivek Singh, lead researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute, believe this can be a ground-breaking and disruptive innovation in treating diseases like corneal scarring (where the cornea becomes opaque) or Keratoconus (where the cornea gradually becomes thin with time).
“It is a made-in-India product by an Indian...
- 8/14/2022
- by Glamsham Bureau
- GlamSham
Hyderabad, Aug 14 (Ians) For the first time in India, researchers in Hyderabad have successfully 3D-printed an artificial cornea and transplanted it into a rabbit eye.
Researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute (Lvpei), Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad (Iith), and the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (Ccmb), have collaborated to develop a 3D-printed cornea from a human donor corneal tissue.
Developed indigenously through government and philanthropic funding, the product is completely natural, contains no synthetic components, is free of animal residues and is safe to use in patients, said a joint statement issued by the three research institutes.
Sayan Basu and Vivek Singh, lead researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute, believe this can be a ground-breaking and disruptive innovation in treating diseases like corneal scarring (where the cornea becomes opaque) or Keratoconus (where the cornea gradually becomes thin with time).
“It is a made-in-India product by an Indian...
Researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute (Lvpei), Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad (Iith), and the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (Ccmb), have collaborated to develop a 3D-printed cornea from a human donor corneal tissue.
Developed indigenously through government and philanthropic funding, the product is completely natural, contains no synthetic components, is free of animal residues and is safe to use in patients, said a joint statement issued by the three research institutes.
Sayan Basu and Vivek Singh, lead researchers from L.V. Prasad Eye Institute, believe this can be a ground-breaking and disruptive innovation in treating diseases like corneal scarring (where the cornea becomes opaque) or Keratoconus (where the cornea gradually becomes thin with time).
“It is a made-in-India product by an Indian...
- 8/14/2022
- by Glamsham Bureau
- GlamSham
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