C
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.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Too fast, or not fast enough? The FAST exam in patients with non-compressible torso hemorrhage
Woo S. Do,Ronald Chang,Erin E. Fox,Charles E. Wade,John B. Holcomb,Matthew J. Martin,Matthew J. Martin +6 more
TL;DR: FAST identified abdominal/pelvic hemorrhage in approximately half of NCTH patients, and this was not improved among patients presenting with shock, and there was no difference between FAST negative or positive patients for ISS, shock, length of stay, or mortality.
Journal Article
Body mass, food and water intake, and activity of pregnant and lactating rat dams during 1.5-g centrifugation.
TL;DR: In the present study, the relationship between body mass, food and water intake, and behavioral activity in pregnant and lactating rat dams exposed to continuous, 1.5-g centrifugation for 32 days is analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hypercoagulability After Injury in Premenopausal Females - A Prospective, Multicenter Study
Matthew J. Pommerening,Diane A. Schwartz,Mitchell J. Cohen,Martin A. Schreiber,Deborah J. Del Junco,Elizabeth A. Camp,Charles E. Wade,John B. Holcomb,Bryan A. Cotton +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that premenopausal females are relatively hypercoagulable compared with age-matched males early after injury, however, this did not translate into higher thromboembolic complications.
Journal Article
Hypergravity effects on pregnancy and parturition
TL;DR: It is suggested that an acute exposure to microgravity-G increases the excitability of soleus motor pool, but the mechanism is still unclear.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hemostatic potential of cold-stored non-leukoreduced whole blood over time: An assessment of platelet function and thrombin generation for optimal shelf life.
Scott Assen,Jessica C. Cardenas,Mitchell J. George,Yao-Wei Wang,Charles E. Wade,David E. Meyer,Bryan A. Cotton +6 more
TL;DR: While the platelet function of WB degrades significantly at 7 days (and again at 14 days), clot initiation remains stable over time, and thrombin generation appears to be improved at 7Days, supports a current storage limit for cold-stored, low-titer WB of 14 days.