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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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Astounding Breadth of Health Disparity: Phenome-Wide Effects of Race on Disease Risk.

TL;DR: A phenotype-wide association study to compare diagnoses among Blacks with those of Whites in one health center in Tennessee using data from 1,883,369 patients shows PheWAS is a viable tool for calculating risk associated with any biomarker.
Journal ArticleDOI

The IRB Reliance Exchange (IREx): A national web-based platform for operationalizing single IRB review

TL;DR: The IRB Reliance Exchange can promote transparency, standardize practice, minimize workflow variation, and mitigate the need for sIRBs to implement significant technical changes to their local electronic systems, as evidenced by continually increasing platform utilization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Saline versus Balanced Crystalloids for Adults with Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: A Subgroup Analysis of the SMART Trial.

TL;DR: Among procedurally treated aSAH patients, the risk of disability or death at 90 days did not significantly differ between saline and balanced crystalloid, and death occurred less frequently with saline than balanced crystalloids.
Book ChapterDOI

Acute Illnesses, Critical Care, Emergency and Surgical Patients

TL;DR: The chapter explains the retrospective cohort studies that are commonly used for investigating rare outcomes in relatively common diseases or in illnesses that are uncommon or rare, and the retrospective nature allows a significantly large cohort populated with the disease or outcome of interest to be reasonably identified.
Journal Article

Endotoxemia-induced Leukopenia in Sheep

TL;DR: The effects of endotoxin on white blood cell counts, hemodynamics, and lung fluid and solute exchange were studied in 26 unanesthetized sheep and the WBC counts did not correlate with the severity of the early pulmonary hypertension.