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Barney Stephenson

Researcher at University of Birmingham

Publications -  14
Citations -  671

Barney Stephenson is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Machine perfusion & Liver transplantation. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 11 publications receiving 558 citations. Previous affiliations of Barney Stephenson include National Institute for Health Research & Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham.

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Transplantation of Declined Liver Allografts Following Normothermic Ex-Situ Evaluation

TL;DR: Viability assessment of high‐risk grafts using NMP‐L provides specific information on liver function and can permit their transplantation while minimizing the recipient risk of primary graft nonfunction, which may increase organ availability for LT.
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Effects of a backboard, bed height, and operator position on compression depth during simulated resuscitation

TL;DR: The use of a CPR backboard did not improve chest compressions, and kneeling on the bed adjacent to the victim or lowering bed height did not impact materially on the quality of chest compression.
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First human liver transplantation using a marginal allograft resuscitated by normothermic machine perfusion

TL;DR: The first report of transplantation of a graft salvaged by postischemia NMLP is presented, with a follow-up period of 15 months, derived from this technology’s unique ability to assess viability during storage.
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The Use of an Acellular Oxygen Carrier in a Human Liver Model of Normothermic Machine Perfusion.

TL;DR: Hemopure can be used as an alternative oxygen carrier to packed red cells in NMP-L perfusion fluid and did not alter intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species, and there was no increase in apoptosis or necrosis observed in any of the tested cell lines.
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Birmingham assessment of breathing study (BABS).

TL;DR: Medical students were unable to identify normal breathing from abnormal breathing reliably resulting in a high number of inappropriate, potentially harmful actions.