Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 31
pro vyhledávání: '"Charles C.J. Wo"'
Autor:
Timothy P. Nicholls, Thomas V. Berne, Charles C.J. Wo, Demetrios Demetriades, J. Peter Gruen, Alexis Dang, Vladimir Zelman, William C. Shoemaker, Howard Belzberg
Publikováno v:
Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection & Critical Care. 63:1032-1042
Objectives: The aims of the present study were to describe the temporal hemodynamic and oxygen transport patterns of patients with head injuries as well as the patterns of those who became brain dead to better understand the role of underlying centra
Publikováno v:
Injury. 38:318-328
Summary Aim To test a mathematical program to monitor early haemodynamic patterns of patients with fractures, predict survival and support initial therapeutic decisions. Methods A mathematical search and display program based on non-invasive haemodyn
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 203:899-907
The aims of this prospective observational study were to describe early hemodynamic patterns of blunt and penetrating truncal injury and to evaluate outcomes prediction using noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring with a mathematical model tested against
Autor:
Charles C.J. Wo, Demetrios Demetriades, Li Chien Chien, Kevin Lu, Roger W. Jelliffe, David S. Bayard, Peter Rhee, William C. Shoemaker
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 171:813-820
The aims of this study were to develop and to test a noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring system that could be applied to combat casualties to supplement conventional vital signs, to use an advanced information system to predict outcomes, and to evalua
Autor:
Andreas Botnen, Roger W. Jelliffe, Kevin Lu, Linda S. Chan, Li-Chien Chien, David S. Bayard, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Charles C.J. Wo, William C. Shoemaker
Publikováno v:
Computers in Biology and Medicine. 36:585-600
The aims were to apply a stochastic model to predict outcome early in acute emergencies and to evaluate the effectiveness of various therapies in a consecutively monitored series of severely injured patients with noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring. T
Autor:
Demetrios Demetriades, Howard Belzberg, Li-Chien Chien, Roger W. Jelliffe, William C. Shoemaker, Kevin Lu, Charles C.J. Wo, David S. Bayard
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care. 60:82-90
The aims are to apply a mathematical search and display model based on noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring, to predict outcome early in a consecutively monitored series of 661 severely injured patients.A prospective observational study by a previously
Autor:
Alexis Dang, J. Peter Gruen, William C. Shoemaker, Tim P. Nicholls, Charles C.J. Wo, Arun P. Amar
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 202:120-130
The aims of this study were to describe the early time course of hemodynamic and tissue perfusion and oxygenation patterns in survivors and nonsurvivors after head injury; to suggest physiologic mechanisms responsible for the observed patterns; and t
Autor:
Ryan Gertz, David S. Bayard, Charles C.J. Wo, Kenneth S. Azarow, Demetrios Demetriades, William C. Shoemaker, Ali Salim, Matthew J. Martin, Carlos V.R. Brown
Publikováno v:
Journal of Pediatric Surgery. 40:1957-1963
The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of a continuous survival probability prediction using noninvasive measures of cardiac performance and tissue perfusion in severely injured pediatric patients.Review of all patients entered into a prosp
Autor:
David S. Bayard, Linda S. Chan, Charles C.J. Wo, Kevin Lu, William C. Shoemaker, Roger W. Jelliffe, Li-Chien Chien
Publikováno v:
Chest. 128:2739-2748
Objective This study applies a stochastic or probability search and display model to prospectively predict outcome and to evaluate therapeutic effects in a consecutively monitored series of 396 patients with severe thoracic and thoracoabdominal injur
Autor:
Andreas Botnen, Matthew J. Martin, David S. Bayard, Nasrollah Ahmadpour, Linda S. Chan, Kevin Lu, William C. Shoemaker, Ashutosh Gandhi, Li-Chien Chien, Demetrios Demetriades, Charles C.J. Wo, Roger W. Jelliffe
Publikováno v:
Critical Care Medicine. 33:1499-1506
Objectives The aims were a) to noninvasively monitor acute emergency trauma patients beginning within 1 hr after admission to the emergency department; b) to prospectively predict outcome; and c) to evaluate the relative effectiveness of various mode