G
Gordon R. Bernard
Researcher at Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Publications - 366
Citations - 82519
Gordon R. Bernard is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lung injury & Sepsis. The author has an hindex of 103, co-authored 346 publications receiving 70417 citations. Previous affiliations of Gordon R. Bernard include Vanderbilt University & Louisiana State University.
Papers
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Journal Article
The adult respiratory distress syndrome.
Cowan Hb,Gordon R. Bernard +1 more
TL;DR: Animal and human investigations shed light on the pathophysiology of the Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome that is allowing researchers to formulate promising new treatment strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Understanding timely STEMI treatment performance: A 3-year retrospective cohort study using diagnosis-to-balloon-time and care subintervals.
Maame Yaa A. B. Yiadom,Olayemi O. Olubowale,Cathy A. Jenkins,Karen F. Miller,Jennifer L West,Timothy J. Vogus,Christoph U. Lehmann,Victoria D. Antonello,Gordon R. Bernard,Alan B. Storrow,Christopher J. Lindsell,Dandan Liu +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify opportunities to improve care by quantifying differences in the timeliness of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) treatment mobilization based on the location of the diagnostic ECG.
Journal ArticleDOI
NF-kB Binding Activity in Mixed Bal Cells From Patients with Sirs and Ards
John W. Christman,John W. Christman,Annapurna Venkatakrishnan,Annapurna Venkatakrishnan,Arthur P. Wheeler,Arthur P. Wheeler,Gordon R. Bernard,Gordon R. Bernard,Timothy S. Blackwell,Timothy S. Blackwell +9 more
TL;DR: Although measurement of NF-KB binding activity does not correlate with the biological markers or outcome measures the authors tested, NF- KB activation in BAL cells may still give clues to the pathogenesis of neutrophilic lung inflammation; however, further studies are necessary to examine the significance of activated BAL cellNF-KB measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cellular and humoral mediators of sepsis syndrome.
TL;DR: The story of mediators in sepsis syndrome is developing extremely rapidly and continues to unfold, and the availability of important probes is allowing major progress to be made in a short period of time.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of a critical care pathway for unstable mechanically ventilated patients.
TL;DR: This article describes outcomes-oriented care through the development and implementation of a multidisciplinary critical pathway for the patient with hemodynamic or respiratory instability, highlighting the value of the pathway as a cost efficient tool.