G
Gail Walker
Researcher at Baptist Hospital of Miami
Publications - 4
Citations - 132
Gail Walker is an academic researcher from Baptist Hospital of Miami. The author has contributed to research in topics: Renal function & Intra-rater reliability. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 105 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Robotic-assisted ventral hernia repair: a multicenter evaluation of clinical outcomes
Anthony Gonzalez,Ernesto Escobar,Rey Jesús Romero,Gail Walker,Jacqueline Mejias,Michelle Gallas,Eugene Dickens,Christopher J Johnson,Jorge Rabaza,Omar Yusef Kudsi +9 more
TL;DR: This large case series of 368 patients demonstrates reproducibility of safety and performance associated with robotic-assisted ventral hernia repairs performed by five surgeons at four institutions, and the results of short term perioperative outcomes for surgeons during their early experience for robotic- assisted cases are in the range of what is reported in the existing published data on laparoscopic and open ventralHernia repairs.
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A multicenter study of initial experience with single-incision robotic cholecystectomies (SIRC) demonstrating a high success rate in 465 cases.
Anthony Gonzalez,Christian Hernandez Murcia,Rey Jesús Romero,Ernesto Escobar,Pedro Garcia,Gail Walker,Michelle Gallas,Eugene Dickens,Bruce McIntosh,William Norwood,Keith Kim,Jorge Rabaza,Don Parris +12 more
TL;DR: A large, multicenter study demonstrates that robotic single-site cholecystectomy is safe and feasible in a wide range of patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reliability and accuracy of simple visual estimation in assessment of peripheral arterial stenosis.
Mohammad Reza Rajebi,Matthew J. Benenati,Melanie Schernthaner,Gail Walker,Ripal T. Gandhi,Constantino Pena,Barry T. Katzen +6 more
TL;DR: Although severe stenosis is readily identified by SVE, arterial stenosis of < 80% is frequently overestimated, especially for carotid arteries, and should be confirmed by caliper assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Association of Contrast and Acute Kidney Injury in the Critically Ill: A Propensity-Matched Study.
TL;DR: In critically ill adults with normal kidney function, low osmolar radiocontrast media did not substantively increase AKI and efforts to prevent AKI should focus on the susceptibility of patients with sepsis, diabetes complications, high APACHE score, or a history of renal disease.