M
Matthew J. Reed
Researcher at University of Edinburgh
Publications - 140
Citations - 4827
Matthew J. Reed is an academic researcher from University of Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Emergency department & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 118 publications receiving 3635 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew J. Reed include St. John's University & University of Modena and Reggio Emilia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
2018 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of syncope.
Michele Brignole,Angel Moya,Frederik J. de Lange,Jean-Claude Deharo,Perry M. Elliott,Alessandra Fanciulli,Artur Fedorowski,Raffaello Furlan,Rose Anne Kenny,Alfonso Martín,Vincent Probst,Matthew J. Reed,Ciara Rice,Richard Sutton,Andrea Ungar,J. Gert van Dijk +15 more
TL;DR: Authors/Task Force Members: Michele Brignole* (Chairperson), Angel Moya* (Co-chairperson) (Spain), Frederik J. de Lange (The Netherlands), Jean-Claude Deharo (France), Perry M. Elliott (UK), Alessandra Fanciulli (Austria), Artur Fedorowski (Sweden), Raffaello Furlan (Italy), Rose Anne Kenny (Ireland), Alfonso Mart ın (Spain
Journal ArticleDOI
2018 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of syncope
Journal ArticleDOI
The ROSE (Risk Stratification of Syncope in the Emergency Department) Study
Matthew J. Reed,David E. Newby,Andrew J Coull,Robin J Prescott,Keith G Jacques,Alasdair Gray +5 more
TL;DR: The ROSE rule has excellent sensitivity and negative predictive value in the identification of high-risk patients with syncope and should now be subjected to external validation.
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TIMI, GRACE and alternative risk scores in Acute Coronary Syndromes: A meta-analysis of 40 derivation studies on 216,552 patients and of 42 validation studies on 31,625 patients
Fabrizio D'Ascenzo,Giuseppe Biondi-Zoccai,Claudio Moretti,Mario Bollati,Pierluigi Omedè,Filippo Sciuto,Davide Giacomo Presutti,Maria Grazia Modena,Mauro Gasparini,Matthew J. Reed,Imad Sheiban,Fiorenzo Gaita +11 more
TL;DR: TIMI and GRACE are the risk scores that up until now have been most extensively investigated, with GRACE performing better, and these other scores may be potentially useful and should be further researched.
Journal ArticleDOI
Can an airway assessment score predict difficulty at intubation in the emergency department
TL;DR: An airway assessment score based on criteria of the LEMON method is able to successfully stratify the risk of intubation difficulty in the emergency department, and patients with a poor laryngoscopic view were more likely to have large incisors, a reduced inter-incisor distance, and a reduced thyroid to floor of mouth distance.