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Alan Tinmouth
Researcher at Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Publications - 182
Citations - 8955
Alan Tinmouth is an academic researcher from Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Blood transfusion. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 164 publications receiving 7566 citations. Previous affiliations of Alan Tinmouth include Ottawa Hospital & Canadian Blood Services.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Red Blood Cell Transfusion: A Clinical Practice Guideline From the AABB*
Jeffrey L. Carson,Brenda J. Grossman,Steven Kleinman,Alan Tinmouth,Marisa B. Marques,Mark K. Fung,John B. Holcomb,Orieji Illoh,Lewis J. Kaplan,Louis M. Katz,Sunil V. Rao,John D. Roback,Aryeh Shander,Robert Weinstein,Lisa Grace,Swinton McLaughlin,Benjamin Djulbegovic +16 more
TL;DR: The AABB developed this guideline to provide clinical recommendations about hemoglobin concentration thresholds and other clinical variables that trigger RBC transfusions in hemodynamically stable adults and children.
Journal ArticleDOI
Platelet Transfusion: A Clinical Practice Guideline From the AABB
Richard M. Kaufman,Benjamin Djulbegovic,Terry Gernsheimer,Steven Kleinman,Alan Tinmouth,Kelley E. Capocelli,Mark Cipolle,Claudia S. Cohn,Mark K. Fung,Brenda J. Grossman,Paul D. Mintz,Barbara A. O’Malley,Deborah A. Sesok-Pizzini,Aryeh Shander,Gary Stack,Kathryn E. Webert,Robert Weinstein,Babu G. Welch,Glenn J.R. Whitman,Edward C.C. Wong,Aaron A.R. Tobian +20 more
TL;DR: These guidelines were designed to provide pragmatic recommendations, based on the best available published evidence, about when platelet transfusion may be appropriate in adult patients, and provide advice for adult patients who are candidates for platelets transfusion.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical consequences of red cell storage in the critically ill
TL;DR: Red cell transfusions are a potentially life‐saving therapy employed during the care of many critically ill patients to replace losses in hemoglobin to maintain oxygen delivery to vital organs and data suggest a possible detrimental clinical effect associated with the transfusion of stored RBCs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Age of Transfused Blood in Critically Ill Adults
Jacques Lacroix,Paul C. Hébert,Dean Fergusson,Alan Tinmouth,Deborah J. Cook,John C. Marshall,Lucy Clayton,Lauralyn McIntyre,Jeannie Callum,Alexis F. Turgeon,Morris A. Blajchman,Timothy S. Walsh,Simon J. Stanworth,Helen Campbell,Gilles Capellier,Pierre Tiberghien,Laurent Bardiaux,Leo M.G. van de Watering,Nardo J. M. van der Meer,Elham Sabri,Abstr Act +20 more
TL;DR: Transfusion of fresh red cells, as compared with standard-issueRed cells, did not decrease the 90-day mortality among critically ill adults and there were no significant between-group differences in any of the secondary outcomes or in the subgroup analyses.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Fresh Red Blood Cell Transfusions on Clinical Outcomes in Premature, Very Low-Birth-Weight Infants: The ARIPI Randomized Trial
Dean Fergusson,Paul C. Hébert,Debora L. Hogan,Louise LeBel,Nicole Rouvinez-Bouali,John A. Smyth,Koravangattu Sankaran,Alan Tinmouth,Morris A. Blajchman,Lajos Kovacs,Christian Lachance,Shoo K. Lee,C. Robin Walker,Brian Hutton,Robin Ducharme,Katelyn Balchin,Tim Ramsay,Jason C. Ford,Ashok Kakadekar,K.P. Ramesh,Stan Shapiro +20 more
TL;DR: In this trial, the use of fresh RBCs compared with standard blood bank practice did not improve outcomes in premature, very low-birth-weight infants requiring a transfusion.