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From the Desk of the Vice Chancellor

Greetings!

As the Vice Chancellor of this premier university, I am extremely pleased to share this space to converse with all of you. The University of Madras is a post- sesquicentennial institution which has forged a glorious path for itself and has been the site for significant scientific discoveries as well as the beacon for national and regional societal transformation. It has successfully managed to hold aloft its tradition even while keeping up with the emerging trends. One reason for this is the way in which the university has kept alive its interactions with all the stakeholders.

The COVID 19 pandemic has introduced a ‘new normal’ and its impact is felt in the workings of the university as well. The students have been attending the lectures online. While online learning has the advantage of being anytime and anywhere, it has taken away the peer group interaction and peer learning which are integral aspects of the university experience. We look forward to welcoming you to the campus very soon. Meanwhile, our faculty and administration will continue to bring the best to the virtual classrooms. As students, you need to view the restrictions posed by the pandemic as a temporary deterrent. Your focus should be to gain the competencies to conduct application oriented research in order to evolve as useful citizens of our society.

Our university boasts of faculty with a high degree of knowledge and commitment to offer the best in teaching and research. Given the context of the pandemic, we need to redefine our teaching-learning processes to offer the best pedagogic experience to our students. Similarly, the post-pandemic era demands that we hone the employment potential and entrepreneurial capacity of our learners. This necessitates that we focus on sponsored research in cutting edge areas.

Our administrative staff have been the backbone of the university. While we move towards a transparent and complete e-governance model, we need more support from you. When the teaching-learning process at our university – from admission to certification -- is moving into the digital era, your skills and competencies need to keep pace.

At our university, we are gearing up for the final round of NAAC re-accreditation. This has offered us an opportunity to assess our Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Challenges. Further, it has made us more determined to reiterate our quality benchmarks in teaching, research and extension activities. We are aware of this responsibility and fully prepared for it because, our university has always encouraged individual thinking within the established frameworks. This is echoed in the words of Tim Burners Lee, who initiated the World Wide Web: “We are forming cells within a global brain and we are excited that we might start to think collectively. What becomes of us still hangs crucially on how we think individually.” Let us unite to make the educational experience at the University of Madras a synergy of the best minds and best thoughts.

Prof.Dr.S.Gowri

Vice-Chancellor
University of Madras

Dr. V. SankarM.Sc. (Anatomy), Ph.D

Professor
Department of Anatomy
0

Awards

27

Publications

15

Seminars / Conference

6

Projects

9

Ph.D Awarded

0

Ph.D Present

Publications

Articles (Total Articles: 2)

# Title Author Publisher Volume Year Page(s)
1 Chapter 21: Fetal neural tissue transplantation for spinal cord injury repair.  Sankar V Human Fetal Tissue Transplantation Springer-Verlag, London 2013 297-305
2 Human amniotic epithelial cells transplantation for contusive spinal cord injury repair  (Chapter C In: Section II Part 4)  Premkumar J, Sridharan N, Tamilselvi P, Sridhar Skylab R, Vijaya Prakash KM, Sankar V. Applications of Perinatal Stem Cells. Atala A. & Murphy S. (eds) Springer-Verlag, London 2013 243-253

Journals (Total Journals: 25)

# Title Author Publisher Volume Year Page(s)
1 Beneficial effects of ethanolic extract of the medicinal herb Mucuna pruriens against oxidative stress and inflammation might be limited in contusive spinal cord injury 1. Chandran P, Chandramohan K, Iyer K, Michael F. M, Seppan P, Venkatachalam S. Biomed Pharmacol J 15(1) 2022 235-248
2 Attenuation of oxidative stress after contusion spinal cord injury through inhibition of Poly ADP Ribose Polymerase involves glutamate cysteine ligase.  Vijaya Prakash KM, Tamilselvi P, Sridhar Skylab R, Kirubhanand C, Venkatachalam S. Process Biochemistry 84 2019 180-185
3 Prospects of siRNA cocktails as tools for modifying multiple gene targets in the injured spinal cord Felicia Mary M, Preeja Chandran PC, Khaviyaa C, Krithika I, Kevin J, Revathidevi S, Sankar V. Experimental Biology and Medicine 244(13) 2019 1096-1110
4 Potential risk of clonally expanded amnion mesenchymal stem cell transplants in contused spinal cords Venkatachalam S, Neelamegan S, Okuda T, Marcus A, Woodbury D, Grumet M Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience 36(3) 2018 387-396
5 Male reproductive toxicity of CrVI: In-utero exposure to CrVI at the critical window of testis differentiation represses the expression of Sertoli cell tight junction proteins and hormone receptors in adult F1 progeny rats. Kumar KM, Aruldhas MM, Banu SL, Sadasivam B, Vengatesh G, Ganesh KM, Navaneetha-balakrishnan S, Navin AK, Michael FM, Venkatachalam S, Stanley JA, Ramachandran I, Banu SK, Akbarsha MA Reproductive Toxicology 69 2017 84-98
6 JNK1 and JNK3 play a significant role in both neuronal apoptosis and necrosis. Evaluation based on in vitro approach using tert-butylhydroperoxide induced oxidative stress in neuro-2A cells and perturbation through 3-aminobenzamide.  Muthaiah VPK, Michael FM, Palaniappan T, Rajan SS, Chandrasekar K, Venkatachalam S. Toxicology In Vitro 41 2017 168-178
7 Transient gestational exposure to hexavalent chromium (CrVI) adversely affects testicular differentiation: A study in rat model Ajit Kumar N, Shobana N, Sankar V, Akbarsha MA, Sakhila Banu K, Michael Aruldhas M. Journal of Endocrinology and Reproduction 21(2) 2017 93-108
8  Contusive spinal cord injury up regulates mu-opioid receptor (mor) gene expression in the brain and down regulates its expression in the spinal cord: possible implications in spinal cord injury research.  Felica Mary M, Alok Nath M, Lavanya V, Kirubhanand C, Tenzin S, Sankar V. Neurological Research 37(9) 2015 788-796
9 Neuroprotective Role of Naringenin on Carbaryl Induced Neurotoxicity in Mouse Neuroblastoma cells. Vijaya Prakash KM, Lavanya V, Felicia Mary M, Kirubhanand C, Sankar V Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics 4(3) 2013 192-197
10 Incomplete Horizontal Fissure of Right Lung - A Case Report. Kirubhanand C, Tamilselvi P, Sridhar Skylab R, Sankar V International Journal of Anatomical Sciences 2(2) 2011 31-33
11 Delayed intrathecal delivery of RhoA siRNA to the contused spinal cord inhibits allodynia, preserves white matter, and increases serotonergic fiber growth Otsuka S, Adamson C, Sankar V, Gibbs KM, Kane-Goldsmith N, Ayer J, Babiarz J, Kalinski H, Ashush H, Alpert E, Lahav R, Feinstein E, Grumet M. J Neurotrauma 28(6) 2011 1063-1076
12 Toward cell therapy using placenta-derived cells: disease mechanisms, cell biology, preclinical studies, and regulatory aspects at the round table Parolini O, Alviano F, Bergwerf I, Boraschi D, De Bari C, De Waele P, Dominici M, Evangelista M, Falk W, Hennerbichler S, Hess DC, Lanzoni G, Liu B, Marongiu F, McGuckin C, Mohr S, Nolli ML, Ofir R, Ponsaerts P, Romagnoli L, Solomon A, Soncini M, Strom S, Surbek D, Sankar V, Wolbank S, Zeisberger S, Zeitlin A, Zisch A, Borlongan CV. Stem Cells and Development 19(2) 2010 143-154
13 Withania somnifera root extract improves catecholamines and physiological abnormalities seen in a Parkinson's disease model mouse Raja Sankar S, Manivasagam T, Sankar V, Prakash S, Muthusamy R, Krishnamurti A, Surendran S. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 125 2009 369-373
14 Effects of lesion or tetrodotoxin inactivation of dorsal raphe nucleus in rats on spatial learning during Morris water maze task Sarihi A, Sankar V. Biomedicine 29 2009 253-258
15 Novel neurotrophic factor secreted by amniotic epithelial cells Sankar V, Tamilselvi P, Prem Kumar J, Sridharan N, Sridhar Skylab R, Vijaya Prakash KM. Biocell 33 2009 81-89
16 Increased expression of neurotrophic like factors in contusion injured spinal cord of wistar albino rats Vijaya Prakash KM, Ravisankar B, Murugesan R, Tamilselvi P, Sridhar Skylab R, Prem Kumar J, Sridharan N, Sankar V. International Journal of Molecular Medicine and Advance Sciences 4 2008 86-97
17 Concise review: isolation and characterization of cells from human term placenta: outcome of the first international workshop on placenta derived stem cells. Parolini O, Alviano F, Bagnara GP, Bilic G, Bühring HJ, Evangelista M, Hennerbichler S, Liu B, Magatti M, Mao N, Miki T, Marongiu F, Nakajima H, Nikaido T, Portmann-Lanz CB, Sankar V, Soncini M, Stadler G, Surbek D, Takahashi TA, Redl H, Sakuragawa N, Wolbank S, Zeisberger S, Zisch A, Strom SC. Stem Cells 26 2008 300 – 311
18 Role of human amniotic epithelial cell transplantation in spinal cord injury repair research. Sankar V, Muthusamy R. Neuroscience 118 2003 11-17
19 Assessment of motor recovery after spinal cord injury in animals: Evaluation of simple behaviour tests based on anatomical facts. Sankar V, Prakash S, Muthusamy R. Anatomical Adjuncts 3(1) 2001 25-34.
20 Spinal cord injury repair research: a new combination treatment strategy Krishnan RV, Muthusamy R, Sankar, V. International Journal of Neuroscience 108 2001 201-207
21  Recovery of locomotor function in adult paraplegic frogs by inductive lability in the distal isolated spinal cord neural networks  Krishnan RV, Sankar V, Muthusamy R. International Journal of Neuroscience 108 2001 43-54
22  Efficacy of manual bladder expression in relieving urine retention after traumatic paraplegia in experimental animals Preetha TS, Sankar V, Muthusamy R. Journal of Anatomical Society of India 49(2) 2000 161-164
23 Ulcerative colitis in bonnet monkeys Prakash S, Sankar V, Muthusamy R, Kamakshi, K. Folia Veterinaria 44(4) 2000 175-178
24 Dracunculiasis in a South Indian Bonnet Monkey Sankar V, Prakash S, Muthusamy R, Kamakshi K. Primates (Japan) 41(1) 2000 89-92
25 Data acquisition and analysis using conventional multimedia computer: a cost-effective method for computerizing electro physiological data. Sankar V, Namasivayam A, Muthusamy R. Indian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 43(3) 1999 403-404
// FLASH NEWS //
  • University of Madras attains category - 1 status from UGC |  NIRF Ranking - Ranked 39 in University Category 2024 |  University of Madras has been graded A++ in the NAAC Assessment

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