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Sarvesh Logsetty
Researcher at University of Manitoba
Publications - 81
Citations - 1432
Sarvesh Logsetty is an academic researcher from University of Manitoba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Population. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 71 publications receiving 1052 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical review: Canadian National Advisory Committee on Blood and Blood Products--Massive transfusion consensus conference 2011: report of the panel.
Walter H. Dzik,Morris A. Blajchman,Morris A. Blajchman,Dean Fergusson,Morad Hameed,Blair Henry,Andrew W. Kirkpatrick,Teresa Korogyi,Sarvesh Logsetty,Robert Skeate,Simon J. Stanworth,Charles MacAdams,Brian Muirhead +12 more
TL;DR: Key findings include a lack of evidence to support the use of 1:1:1 blood component ratios as the standard of care, the importance of early use of tranexamic acid, the expected value of an organized response plan, and the recommendation for an integrated approach that includes antifibrinolytics.
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Access to trauma systems in Canada.
Syed Morad Hameed,Nadine Schuurman,Tarek Razek,Darrell C. Boone,Rardi van Heest,Tracey Taulu,Nasira Lakha,David C. Evans,D. Ross Brown,Andrew W. Kirkpatrick,Henry T. Stelfox,Dianne Dyer,Mary van Wijngaarden-Stephens,Sarvesh Logsetty,Avery B. Nathens,Tanya Charyk-Stewart,Sandro Rizoli,Lorraine N. Tremblay,Frederick D. Brenneman,Najma Ahmed,Elsie Galbraith,Neil Parry,Murray J. Girotti,Guiseppe Pagliarello,Nancy Tze,Kosar Khwaja,Natalie L. Yanchar,John M. Tallon,J. Andrew I. Trenholm,Candance Tegart,Ofer Amram,Myriam Berube,Usmaan Hameed,Richard K. Simons +33 more
TL;DR: In this article, a national survey was used to identify the locations and capabilities of adult trauma centers across Canada and identify the catchment populations they serve, and geographic information science methods were used to map the locations of Level I and Level II trauma centers and to define 1-hour road travel times around each trauma center.
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Protocol for the PREHAB study—Pre-operative Rehabilitation for reduction of Hospitalization After coronary Bypass and valvular surgery: a randomised controlled trial
Andrew N. Stammers,Dustin Scott Kehler,Jonathan Afilalo,L. J. Avery,Sean M. Bagshaw,Hilary P. Grocott,Jean-Francois Légaré,Sarvesh Logsetty,Colleen J. Metge,Thang Nguyen,Kenneth Rockwood,Jitender Sareen,Jo Ann V. Sawatzky,Navdeep Tangri,Nicholas Giacomantonio,Ansar Hassan,Todd A. Duhamel,Rakesh C. Arora +17 more
TL;DR: This trial will compare a preoperative, interdisciplinary exercise and health promotion intervention to current standard of care (StanC) for elective coronary artery bypass and valvular surgery patients for the purpose of determining if the intervention improves 3-month and 12-month clinical outcomes among a population of frail patients waiting for Elective cardiac surgery.
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Evaluation of possible tourniquet systems for use in the Canadian Forces.
TL;DR: The most effective tourniquets were the EMT and ST, which is also the lightest, fastest, easiest to learn, and the cheapest but it causes a lot of pain and presumably, local tissue damage.
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The association between number and type of traumatic life experiences and physical conditions in a nationally representative sample.
TL;DR: The data suggest that the impact of certain types and number of traumas may differ with respect to their relationship with physical health problems independent of PTSD.