Tuesday, October 5, 2010

India's first Test-tube baby doctor was mired in controversy




As Test-tube baby pioneer Robert Edwards comes under focus for bagging the 2010 Nobel Prize for Medicine, the physician behind India's first Test-tube baby in 1978 was mired in a controversy and even hounded that led him to end his life.

The country's first successful in-vitro fertilization to produce "Durga" alias Kanupriya Agarwal--second test tube baby in the world--was performed by Dr Subhash Mukhopadhyay on October 3, 1978. The Calcutta-based doctor got belated recognition eight years later but it was tragically late.

The world's first test tube baby Louise Brown was born just three months earlier on July 25, 1978 in the UK when Edwards' efforts were crownd by success. Some four million Test-tube babies have been born worldwide since 1978.

Durga's birth was caught in ethical and moral controversies with the West Bengal government even denouncing Mukhopadhyay's claim that he had created history in India. The physician's achievements  were not recognised at first.

Facing social ostracization, bureaucratic negligence, reprimand and insult from the Marxist government and refusal of the Government of India  to allow him to attend international conferences, the physician committed suicide in his Calcutta residence on June 19, 1981.

The physician was subjected to repeated questioning by a committeee formed by the West Bengal government. The Commitee said the doctor's work was bogus His feat has since  been posthumously  recognised. He has been given belated recognition as the Indian physician who in 1986 was "officially" regarded as being the first doctor to perform in-vitro fertilization in India.

Eight years after the birth of 'Durga', India's second Test-tube baby Harsha was born. Indira Hinduja was the gynaecologist responsible for the birth of Harsha Chawda at the state-run hospital K.E.M. Hospital in  Mumbai on August 16, 1986. Some records say that Harsha is the 'first' Test-tube baby because of the controversy involving Mukhopadhayay.

Like Brown's birth, Durga's birth had caused public debate, criticism and  even social professional ostracism of those involved in  initiating life outside the body. Harsha's birth opened up the much-sought opportunity for treating couples incapable of natural reproduction. The ICMR estimates at least 10 per  cent of couples in India face infertility.

Apart from factors like low sperm count, infections and erectile dysfunction in males, damaged fallopian tubes, low egg production and  fibroids in females, lifestyle changes have also adversely  affected fertility.

In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) is a complex process in which the ovum is fertilised outside the body and the fertilised egg is then implanted to the uterus. Presently, there are more than 400 IVF clinics in India that even treat those coming from abroad due to the comparatively  lower costs and, in some cases, for Indian donor eggs.

Mukhopadhyaya's life and death has been the subject of countless newspaper reviews and inspired the Hindi movie 'Ek Docto

Sunday, October 3, 2010

nautanki mahel

Nautanki Mahal in Kingdom of dreams is marvelously designed 848 seat theatre for concerts and plays. It is a place where you can enjoy the magic of Indian cinema themed theatrical musical extravaganzas which explodes your senses. The Mahal offers a unique and mesmerizing on stage stunning drama with glitz and glamour packed content. Here you will experience Indian culture with bollywood style entertainment and storytelling. The shows are designed, scripted, produced and directed using the best Indian and international talent. The show is held on every night (except Mondays) from 8:30 to 10:45 pm and they offer free drinks and snacks before, after and during the 20 minutes of interval break between the two hour musical.


Show ticket pricing
The show tickets are available in five figures – Platinum Rs. 6000, Diamond Rs. 3500, Gold Rs. 2500, Silver Rs. 1500 and bronze Rs. 1000. The cheapest ticket of the show costs Rs. 1000 and if you like your experience to be royal, be ready to give Rs. 6000 for the best seats in the theatre as well as some pampering during the show.
The theatre is built like an Indian Palace with the three frames of the proscenium are in the form of LED arches and a big LED screen constitutes the stage’s back wall. The outer wall of the theatre is carved with designs of some geometric filigree and some Khajurahi ideas. The stage has two parts that can dip down to the basement and also rise up to 2m so that elephants and trucks can amazingly show on stage. The stage can have 16 flying acts of people or objects at a same time.

chid Seven-year-old Keshav stole the limelight at the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony

Seven-year-old Keshav stole the limelight at the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony tonight as he mesmerised the spectators, including President Pratibha Patil and Prince Charles, synchronising his tabla with the beat of a variety of drummers numbering over 800. From Auroville in Puducherry, the
child prodigy's performance was part of 'Rythms of India' segment of the ceremony which was tipped as an Indian invocation of the ceremony bringing together folk drums of the country. Beats of a variety of 800 drums -- from Pung Cholom of Manipur to Chenda of Kerala to Gudum Baja -- reverberated the stadium as spectators were left spell-bound.
The first segment of performance lasted for 12 minutes.
Wangala drummers from Meghalaya, the energetic dancing drummers from Karnataka Dollu Kunita, a folk drum Punjab Dhol, Koya from Orissa, Gajja Dhol from Maharashtra, and Bihu drummers from Assam also added to the charm of the performance.