The Unsung Pioneer of Indian Medicine
Decades before mass WHO campaigns, Dr. Sudrania submitted a historic thesis on serum electrolytes in infantile diarrhea. He independently established biochemical rehydration frameworks in Rajasthan, saving countless infants from preventable dehydration.
Deployed as a medical emissary to Libya, Dr. Sudrania handled complex pediatric wards across borders. It was during these intense clinical hours that he began formulating a radical theory connecting the acoustics of an infant's cry to hidden congenital diseases.
At the National Conference of Japan in Tokyo, he shocked the medical world with the Electrocrygram. Based on C.V. Raman's theories, his device converted infant cries into electrical graphs to diagnose heart defects and leukemia. He was executing algorithmic diagnostics 40 years before modern AI.
Recognized by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) as a Senior Scientist and validated by peers at WHO Headquarters in Geneva. His diagnostic frameworks in Dermatoglyphics and Acoustic Analysis remain foundational pillars of preventive pediatrics today.