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Mohammed A. Quader

Researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University

Publications -  97
Citations -  1569

Mohammed A. Quader is an academic researcher from Virginia Commonwealth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 73 publications receiving 1050 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohammed A. Quader include University of Virginia & VCU Medical Center.

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Postoperative Atrial Fibrillation Significantly Increases Mortality, Hospital Readmission, and Hospital Costs

TL;DR: New onset POAF is associated with increased risk-adjusted mortality, hospital costs, and readmission rates, and Protocols to reduce the incidence have the potential to significantly impact patient outcomes and the delivery of high-quality, cost-effective patient care.
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Contemporary outcomes in reoperative mitral valve surgery

TL;DR: As the volume of redo mitral valve surgery increases, outcomes have dramatically improved and are now better than predicted, however, the risk-adjusted predictors of poor outcomes continue to be identified.
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Preoperative anemia versus blood transfusion: Which is the culprit for worse outcomes in cardiac surgery?

TL;DR: PRBC transfusion appears to be more closely associated with risk‐adjusted morbidity and mortality compared with preoperative Hct level alone, supporting efforts to reduce unnecessary PRBC transfusions.
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Socioeconomic Distressed Communities Index Predicts Risk-Adjusted Mortality After Cardiac Surgery.

TL;DR: The Distressed Communities Index independently predicts risk-adjusted operative mortality after CABG and should be considered when building risk models, evaluating resource utilization, and comparing hospitals.
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Minimally invasive aortic valve replacement provides equivalent outcomes at reduced cost compared with conventional aortic valve replacement: A real-world multi-institutional analysis

TL;DR: Mortality and morbidity outcomes of mini-AVR are equivalent to conventional AVR and are associated with decreased ventilator time, blood product use, early discharge, and reduced total hospital cost.