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Charles E. Wade

Researcher at University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Publications -  609
Citations -  40501

Charles E. Wade is an academic researcher from University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resuscitation & Injury Severity Score. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 579 publications receiving 36280 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles E. Wade include University of California, Davis & University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.

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Inappropriate drinking and secretion of vasopressin after caval constriction in dogs

TL;DR: Water intake and plasma levels of AVP were increased in spite of a fall in plasma osmolality and an increase in vascular volume, which show that chronic caval constriction causes a profound primary disturbance in mechanisms regulating water balance, which may contribute to the formation of edema fluid.
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Assessment of cardiovascular regulation after burns by nonlinear analysis of the electrocardiogram.

TL;DR: RRI complexity was abnormally low during the early postburn period, possibly reflecting physiologic deterioration, and Resuscitation was associated with a progressive improvement in complexity as measured by ApEn and SampEn and complementary changes in other measures.
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ROC trials update on prehospital hypertonic saline resuscitation in the aftermath of the US-Canadian trials

TL;DR: The objectives of this review are to assess the current state of hypertonic saline as a prehospital resuscitation fluid in hypotensive trauma patients, particularly after the 3 major Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium trauma trials in the US and Canada were halted due to futility.
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Benefit of slow infusion of hypertonic saline/dextran in swine with uncontrolled aortotomy hemorrhage.

TL;DR: Results are consistent with the hypothesis that resuscitation solutions can be effective for treatment of uncontrolled hemorrhage when administered at a slow infusion rate 30 min after the insult.
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Plasma Colloid Osmotic Pressure is an Early Indicator of Injury and Hemorrhagic Shock

TL;DR: In the absence of significant alterations in vital signs, plasma COP levels were associated with increased requirements for blood products and increased syndecan 1 shedding, which is indicative of injury severity.