J
Joseph P. Minei
Researcher at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Publications - 44
Citations - 2935
Joseph P. Minei is an academic researcher from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Burn injury & Tumor necrosis factor alpha. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 44 publications receiving 2833 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph P. Minei include University of Pittsburgh & Cornell University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Allogeneic blood transfusion increases the risk of postoperative bacterial infection: a meta-analysis.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that allogeneic blood transfusion is a greater risk factor in the traumatically injured patient when compared with the elective surgical patient for the development of postoperative bacterial infection.
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Blunt splenic injury in adults: Multi-institutional Study of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma.
Andrew B. Peitzman,Brian V. Heil,Louis Rivera,Michael B. Federle,Brian G. Harbrecht,Keith D. Clancy,Martin A. Croce,Blaine L. Enderson,John A. Morris,David V. Shatz,J. Wayne Meredith,Juan B. Ochoa,Samir M. Fakhry,James G. Cushman,Joseph P. Minei,Mary McCarthy,Fred A. Luchette,Ricard N. Townsend,Glenn Tinkoff,Ernest F. J. Block,Steven E. Ross,Eric R. Frykberg,Richard M. Bell,Frank E. Davis,Leonard J. Weireter,Michael B. Shapiro,G. Patrick Kealey,Fred Rogers,Larry M. Jones,John B. Cone,C. Michael Dunham,Clyde E. McAuley +31 more
TL;DR: Successful nonoperative management was associated with higher blood pressure and hematocrit, and less severe injury based on ISS, Glasgow Coma Scale, grade of splenic injury, and quantity of hemoperitoneum.
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The importance of fracture pattern in guiding therapeutic decision-making in patients with hemorrhagic shock and pelvic ring disruptions.
TL;DR: Patients with signs of ongoing shock with SFP pelvic injury and hemoperitoneum require celiotomy as the initial intervention, as the hemorrhagic focus is predominantly intraperitoneal.
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Multicenter clinical trial of recombinant human insulin-like growth factor I in patients with acute renal failure
Raimund Hirschberg,Joel D. Kopple,Pamela A. Lipsett,Ernest Benjamin,Joseph P. Minei,Timothy E Albertson,Mark A. Munger,Michael Metzler,Gary P. Zaloga,Michael J. Murray,Stephen F. Lowry,John D. Conger,Wade McKeown,Michael H. O'Shea,Robert P. Baughman,Kenneth E. Wood,Marilyn Haupt,Roger Kaiser,Hank Simms,David G. Warnock,Warren R. Summer,Raymond L. Hintz,Brian Myers,Kathrine Haenftling,William Capra,Marilyn Pike,Hans Peter Guler +26 more
TL;DR: rhIGF-I does not accelerate the recovery of renal function in ARF patients with substantial comorbidity and is not safe in patients with ARF.
Journal ArticleDOI
Bacterial translocation and intestinal atrophy after thermal injury and burn wound sepsis.
TL;DR: Burn injury and infection resulted in significant atrophy of small bowel mucosa temporally associated with continued BT, perhaps due to failure to maintain the mucosal barrier.