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Richard N. Wissler

Researcher at University of Rochester

Publications -  41
Citations -  2054

Richard N. Wissler is an academic researcher from University of Rochester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Baricity & Blood transfusion. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 41 publications receiving 1843 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard N. Wissler include University of Florida & Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Association between Intraoperative Blood Transfusion and Mortality and Morbidity in Patients Undergoing Noncardiac Surgery

TL;DR: Intraoperative blood transfusions is associated with a higher risk of mortality and morbidity in surgical patients with severe anemia, and it is unknown whether this association is due to the adverse effects of blood transfusion or is, instead, the result of increased blood loss in the patients receiving blood.
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Perioperative outcomes among patients with the modified metabolic syndrome who are undergoing noncardiac surgery.

TL;DR: Patients with the modified metabolic syndrome undergoing noncardiac surgery are at substantially higher risk of complications compared with patients of normal weight.
Journal Article

Canine gestation length: variation related to time of mating and fertile life of sperm.

TL;DR: Fertile single matings 3 days before the LH peak provided evidence that the potential postcoital fertile longevity of canine sperm is at least 6 days and thus contributed, along with variability in the onset of estrus, to the observed variation in apparent gestation length in the dog.
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Racial differences in the use of epidural analgesia for labor.

TL;DR: Black and Hispanic women in labor are less likely than non-Hispanic white women to receive epidural analgesia, and differences remain after accounting for differences in insurance coverage, provider practice, and clinical characteristics.
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Density of Lumbar Cerebrospinal Fluid in Pregnant and Nonpregnant Humans

TL;DR: Pregnancy and the immediate postpartum period are associated with the lowest CSF densities, and the cutoff values defining hypobaricity (mean CSF density minus three standard deviations) are greater than previously reported.