Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    News Analysis India
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • World
    • India
      • Chhattisgarh
      • Jharkhand
      • Madhya Pradesh
      • Bihar
    • Sports
    • Tech
    • Entertainment
    • Business
    • Health
    News Analysis India
    Home»Health»Padma Shri for BHU’s Kala-Azar Pioneer After 38 Years of Research
    Health

    Padma Shri for BHU’s Kala-Azar Pioneer After 38 Years of Research

    News Analysis IndiaBy News Analysis IndiaJanuary 26, 20262 Mins Read
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Copy Link Reddit Threads Email
    Padma Shri for BHU’s Kala-Azar Pioneer After 38 Years of Research
    Share
    Copy Link WhatsApp Twitter Facebook Telegram Threads Email

    Varanasi’s medical fraternity is jubilant as BHU Professor Shyam Sundar Agarwal receives the Padma Shri for his transformative contributions to Kala-Azar treatment. One of two BHU luminaries honored this Republic Day eve, Agarwal’s journey from Bihar’s disease-ravaged fields to global acclaim is nothing short of inspirational.

    In Muzaffarpur, where Kala-Azar claimed thousands yearly in the 1980s, patients faced grim realities: delayed diagnoses costing 400-500 rupees and drugs that healed just 35% while killing 12-15%. Agarwal, driven by this crisis, invented the RK-39 diagnostic strip—the world’s first rapid 10-minute test, ending weeks of agony.

    Challenging failing therapies, he orchestrated India’s Kala-Azar Control Program in the 1990s and spearheaded drug innovations. His single-dose liposomal Amphotericin-B became WHO-approved gold standard, while multi-drug regimens with Miltefosine and Paromomycin empowered rural clinics.

    Miltefosine’s development and initial trials trace back to his lab, as does a pivotal 2002 trial on 300 patients boasting 94% efficacy via oral dosing. Over 38 years, Agarwal’s persistence turned a public health nightmare into a success story.

    Grateful to the government, the soft-spoken professor insists he’s ‘just an ordinary person.’ Yet his legacy—WHO endorsements, national program adoptions—proves otherwise. This Padma Shri not only celebrates one man’s grit but underscores India’s strides in tropical disease elimination, setting a precedent for collaborative medical triumphs.

    BHU Professor Bihar Kala-Azar Indian Health Research Kala-Azar Treatment Padma Shri 2024 Shyam Sundar Agarwal Visceral Leishmaniasis WHO Approved Drugs
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram Email Copy Link Reddit WhatsApp Threads

    Related News

    Leucorrhea Alert: Effective Home Treatments for White Vaginal Discharge

    Health February 6, 2026

    Ayurveda Warns: Beat February Flu with These Immunity Boosters

    Health February 6, 2026

    Rajya Sabha Debate: Integrate Foot Reflexology in AYUSH System

    Health February 6, 2026

    Why Post-Delivery Care for Mothers Matters More Than You Think

    Health February 6, 2026

    Relieve Menstrual Cramps Naturally with Garbaasana

    Health February 6, 2026

    Beyond Indigestion: Ayurvedic Fixes for Intestinal Woes

    Health February 6, 2026
    -Advertisement-
    News Analysis India
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About
    • Contact
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 News Analysis India. All Rights Reserved

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.