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Sergio Anillo

Researcher at University at Buffalo

Publications -  5
Citations -  494

Sergio Anillo is an academic researcher from University at Buffalo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Cohort study. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 406 citations.

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Management of the Potential Organ Donor in the ICU: Society of Critical Care Medicine/American College of Chest Physicians/Association of Organ Procurement Organizations Consensus Statement

Robert M. Kotloff, +41 more
TL;DR: The goal of this document is to provide critical care practitioners with essential information and practical recommendations related to management of the potential organ donor, based on the available literature and expert consensus.
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Interleukin-6 in surgery, trauma, and critical care part II: clinical implications.

TL;DR: There is an association between IL-6 elevation and adverse outcome and interleukin-6 levels can also be used to stratify patients for therapeutic intervention.
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Analytic Review: Interleukin-6 in Surgery, Trauma, and Critical Care: Part I: Basic Science

TL;DR: The interleukin-6 (IL-6)-type cytokines are released in response to tissue injury or an inflammatory stimulus and act locally and systemically to generate a variety of physiologic responses, principal among them is the acute phase response.
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Transfusion-related acute lung injury.

TL;DR: Compared with many other forms of acute lung injury, including the acute respiratory distress syndrome, TRALI is generally transient, reverses spontaneously, and carries a better prognosis.
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Examining the immune signatures of SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy and the impact on neurodevelopment: Protocol of the SIGNATURE longitudinal study

TL;DR: The SIGNATURE project as discussed by the authors proposed a cohort study of SARS-CoV-2-infected pregnant women and their newborns, which explored how the presence of prenatal SARS infection and other non-infectious stressors generated an abnormal inflammatory activity in the newborn.