Praveena Machineni

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education and Research, Chennai, IND.

3 publications 2018 – 2025

Research Overview

Praveena Machineni works across endocrinology, transplant medicine, and clinical education, addressing uncommon but diagnostically challenging conditions. Her published cases highlight rare hormonal disorders and unusual causes of low blood sugar, and she has contributed to research on organ donation and liver transplantation. Her work emphasizes accurate diagnosis, timely treatment, and the importance of recognizing rare conditions in clinical practice.

Publications

A Rare Case of Presumed Insulin-Like Growth Factor 2 (IGF-2)-Mediated Hypoglycemia.

2025

Cureus

Gupta K, Asirvatham AR, Sundaram S, Machineni P, Gogineni SN +1 more

Plain English
A 75-year-old man had repeated episodes of dangerously low blood sugar that resolved with eating, and investigation found that the cause was not diabetes-related at all. A gastrointestinal stromal tumor in the abdomen was producing a protein called IGF-2 that mimics insulin and drives down blood sugar. Treatment with targeted cancer therapy eliminated the hypoglycemic episodes, illustrating that tumors can cause low blood sugar through a mechanism unrelated to the pancreas.

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Spontaneous Pregnancy in Genetically Confirmed 11-Beta Hydroxylase Deficiency: A Case Series and Literature Review.

2025

Cureus

Machineni P, Ranjan A, Asirvatham AR, Gupta K, Mahadevan S

Plain English
This case series describes two women with a rare form of congenital adrenal hyperplasia called 11-beta hydroxylase deficiency who achieved spontaneous pregnancy despite the condition typically impairing fertility. Both cases were confirmed genetically, and one had been misdiagnosed for years as a different adrenal condition. The cases highlight that spontaneous conception is possible even in classic forms of this disorder and underscore the need for accurate genetic diagnosis and long-term reproductive counseling.

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Liver biopsy in assessment of extended criteria donors.

2018

Liver transplantation : official publication of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases and the International Liver Transplantation Society

Oliver JB, Machineni P, Bongu A, Patel T, Nespral J +8 more

Plain English
Researchers examined whether taking a liver biopsy before recovering an organ from a brain-dead donor — a practice used to assess borderline livers — affected transplant rates and outcomes. Across 1,323 donors, biopsies were safe and actually reduced the rate of futile organ recoveries by identifying livers that would not have been usable, without reducing the overall number of transplants performed. Wider use of pre-recovery biopsy, especially in liver-only donors, could save costs and improve how organs are allocated.

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Publication data sourced from PubMed . Plain-English summaries generated by AI. Not medical advice.