S
Samuel A. Tisherman
Researcher at University of Maryland, Baltimore
Publications - 270
Citations - 9719
Samuel A. Tisherman is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, Baltimore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resuscitation & Hypothermia. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 263 publications receiving 9126 citations. Previous affiliations of Samuel A. Tisherman include University of South Florida & University of Pittsburgh.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Delay in cooling negates the beneficial effect of mild resuscitative cerebral hypothermia after cardiac arrest in dogs: a prospective, randomized study
TL;DR: Mild, resuscitative cerebral hypothermia induced immediately with reperfusions after cardiac arrest improves cerebral functional and morphologic outcome, whereas a delay of 15 mins in initiation of cooling after reperfusion may not improve functional outcome, although it may slightly decrease tissue damage.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mild cerebral hypothermia during and after cardiac arrest improves neurologic outcome in dogs.
Y. Leonov,F Sterz,Peter Safar,Ann Radovsky,Ken-ichi Oku,Samuel A. Tisherman,S. William Stezoski +6 more
TL;DR: Mild brain cooling during and after insult improves neurologic outcome after cardiac arrest, induced before cardiac arrest and after arrest, is concluded.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mild hypothermic cardiopulmonary resuscitation improves outcome after prolonged cardiac arrest in dogs.
TL;DR: Mild cerebral hypothermia started during or immediately after external CPR improves neurologic recovery and brain histopathologic damage scores were also lower (better) in groups 2 and 3 than in group 1.
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Out-of-hospital Hypertonic Resuscitation After Traumatic Hypovolemic Shock: A Randomized, Placebo Controlled Trial
Eileen M. Bulger,Susanne May,Jeffery D. Kerby,Scott S. Emerson,Ian G. Stiell,Martin A. Schreiber,Karen J. Brasel,Samuel A. Tisherman,Raul Coimbra,Sandro Rizoli,Joseph P. Minei,J. Steven Hata,George Sopko,David C. Evans,David B. Hoyt +14 more
TL;DR: Among injured patients with hypovolemic shock, initial resuscitation fluid treatment with either HS or HSD compared with NS, did not result in superior 28-day survival, and interpretation of these findings is limited by the early stopping of the trial.
Journal ArticleDOI
Out-of-Hospital Hypertonic Resuscitation Following Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Eileen M. Bulger,Karen J. Brasel,Martin A. Schreiber,Jeffrey D. Kerby,Samuel A. Tisherman,Craig D. Newgard,Arthur S. Slutsky,Raul Coimbra,Scott S. Emerson,Joseph P. Minei,Berit Bardarson,Peter J. Kudenchuk,Andrew J. Baker,Jim Christenson,Ahamed H. Idris,Daniel Davis,Timothy C. Fabian,Tom P. Aufderheide,Clifton W. Callaway,Carolyn Williams +19 more
TL;DR: Among patients with severe TBI not in hypovolemic shock, initial resuscitation with either hypertonic saline or hypertonics saline/dextran, compared with normal saline did not result in superior 6-month neurologic outcome or survival.