scispace - formally typeset
A

Alan H. Morris

Researcher at University of Utah

Publications -  252
Citations -  31748

Alan H. Morris is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: ARDS & Mechanical ventilation. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 241 publications receiving 29880 citations. Previous affiliations of Alan H. Morris include Intermountain Medical Center & Boston Children's Hospital.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon Monoxide Research Group, LDS Hospital, Utah in reply to Scheinkestel et al. and Emerson: The role of hyperbaric oxygen in carbon monoxide poisoning

TL;DR: This comprehensive response was invited by the Editor of Emergency Medicine Australasia to allow the Group from Salt Lake City, Utah to review the two articles 'Where to now with carbon monoxide poisoning?' by Scheinkestel et al.
Journal ArticleDOI

A frame-based representation for a bedside ventilator weaning protocol

TL;DR: The use of a frame-based knowledge representation is described to construct an adequately-explicit bedside clinical decision support application for ventilator weaning that consists of a data entry form, a knowledge base, an inference engine, and a patient database.
Journal ArticleDOI

Civilian Ground and Air Transport of Adults With Acute Respiratory Failure

TL;DR: Of 44 attempted transports during the last three years, 43 (98%) were safely accomplished without obvious ill effect to the patient, and a transport system for the critically ill was developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lung water measurement by nuclear magnetic resonance: correlation with morphometry

TL;DR: NMR techniques, which are noninvasive and nondestructive, provide reliable estimates of lung water density and that the influence of lung inflation on rho H2O is important only in the presence of deliberately induced very large variations in the lung inflation level are indicated.
Journal Article

Pulmonary function testing: sources of error in measurement and interpretation.

TL;DR: Valid pulmonary function data require that attention be paid to issues that can lead to errors in measurement or in interpretation, and routine procedures designed to reduce errors should be established.