E
Erik R. Swenson
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 232
Citations - 7940
Erik R. Swenson is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hypoxia (medical) & Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 217 publications receiving 6537 citations. Previous affiliations of Erik R. Swenson include Heidelberg University & Veterans Health Administration.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Control of Confounding and Reporting of Results in Causal Inference Studies. Guidance for Authors from Editors of Respiratory, Sleep, and Critical Care Journals
David J. Lederer,Scott C. Bell,Richard D. Branson,James D. Chalmers,Rachel Marshall,David M. Maslove,David Ost,Naresh M. Punjabi,Michael Schatz,Alan R. Smyth,Paul W. Stewart,Samy Suissa,Alex A. Adjei,Cezmi A. Akdis,Elie Azoulay,Jan Bakker,Jan Bakker,Jan Bakker,Zuhair K. Ballas,Philip G. Bardin,Esther Barreiro,Rinaldo Bellomo,Jonathan A. Bernstein,Vito Brusasco,Timothy G. Buchman,Sudhansu Chokroverty,Nancy A. Collop,James D. Crapo,Dominic A. Fitzgerald,Lauren Hale,Nicholas Hart,Felix J.F. Herth,Theodore J. Iwashyna,Gisli Jenkins,Martin Kolb,Guy B. Marks,Peter J. Mazzone,J. Randall Moorman,Thomas M. Murphy,Terry L. Noah,Paul N. Reynolds,Dieter Riemann,Richard Russell,Richard Russell,Aziz Sheikh,Giovanni Sotgiu,Erik R. Swenson,Rhonda D. Szczesniak,Rhonda D. Szczesniak,Ronald Szymusiak,Jean-Louis Teboul,Jean Louis Vincent +51 more
TL;DR: Control of Confounding and Reporting of Results in Causal Inference Studies Guidance for Authors from Editors of Respiratory, Sleep, and Critical Care Journals is published.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acute High-Altitude Illnesses
Peter Bärtsch,Erik R. Swenson +1 more
TL;DR: A 45-year-old healthy man wishes to climb Mount Kilimanjaro in a 5-day period, starting at 1800 m, and wants to know how he can prevent becoming ill at high altitude and whether training or sleeping under normobaric hypoxic conditions in the weeks before the ascent would be helpful.
Journal ArticleDOI
Physiological aspects of high-altitude pulmonary edema
TL;DR: These studies confirm in humans that high capillary pressure induces a high-permeability-type lung edema in the absence of inflammation, a concept first introduced under the term "stress failure."
Journal ArticleDOI
Association of Borderline Pulmonary Hypertension With Mortality and Hospitalization in a Large Patient Cohort: Insights From the Veterans Affairs Clinical Assessment, Reporting, and Tracking Program.
Bradley A. Maron,Bradley A. Maron,Edward Hess,Thomas M. Maddox,Thomas M. Maddox,Alexander R. Opotowsky,Ryan J. Tedford,Tim Lahm,Karen E. Joynt,Daniel J. Kass,Thomas Stephens,Maggie A. Stanislawski,Erik R. Swenson,Ronald H. Goldstein,Jane A. Leopold,Roham T. Zamanian,Jean M. Elwing,Mary E. Plomondon,Gary K. Grunwald,Anna E. Barón,John S. Rumsfeld,Gaurav Choudhary +21 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the association between pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP) and outcomes of all-cause mortality and hospitalization, adjusted for clinical covariates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hypercapnic acidosis and mortality in acute lung injury.
TL;DR: Results are consistent with a protective effect of hypercapnic acidosis against ventilator-associated lung injury that was not found when the further ongoing injury was reduced by 6 mL/kg predicted body weight tidal volumes.