T
Teresa Nelson
Researcher at Princeton University
Publications - 9
Citations - 750
Teresa Nelson is an academic researcher from Princeton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome & Traumatic Shock. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 703 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Tissue oxygen saturation predicts the development of organ dysfunction during traumatic shock resuscitation
Stephen M. Cohn,Avery B. Nathens,Frederick A. Moore,Peter Rhee,Juan Carlos Puyana,Ernest E. Moore,Gregory J. Beilman,Janet McCarthy,Rachelle B. Jonas,Joe Johnston,Peter P. Lopez,Dian Nuxoll,Huawei Tang,Bruce A. McKinley,Burapat Sangthong,Constantinos Constantinou,Patricio M. Polanco,Andrew B. Peitzman,Stephanie Huls,Jeffrey L. Johnson,Catherine C. Cothren,Melissa Thorson,Alan Beal,Teresa Nelson,Ronald G. Pearl,Larry M. Gentilello,Anthony A. Meyer,Le Ann D. Anderson,Barbara L. Gallea,Diane Rupp,Becky Saar,Michelle McGraw,Virginia Diaz,Kristi Carlson,Greg Wheatley +34 more
TL;DR: NIRS-derived muscle StO2 measurements perform similarly to BD in identifying poor perfusion and predicting the development of MODS or death after severe torso trauma, yet have the additional advantages of being continuous and noninvasive.
Journal ArticleDOI
Massive transfusion in trauma patients: tissue hemoglobin oxygen saturation predicts poor outcome.
Frederick A. Moore,Teresa Nelson,Bruce A. McKinley,Ernest E. Moore,Avery B. Nathens,Peter Rhee,Juan Carlos Puyana,Gregory J. Beilman,Stephen M. Cohn,Janet McCarthy,Rachelle B. Jonas,Joe Johnston,Peter P. Lopez,Avery B. Nathen,Dian Nuxoll,Huawei Tang,Burapat Sangthong,Constantinos Constantinou,Patricio M. Polanco,Andrew B. Peitzman,Stephanie Huls,Jeffrey L. Johnson,Catherine C. Cothren,Melissa Thorson,Alan Beal,G. Pearl Ronald,Larry M. Gentilello,Anthony A. Meyer,Leann Anderson,Barbara L. Gallea,Diane Rupp,Becky Saar,Michelle McGraw,V. A. Diaz,Kristi Carlson,Greg Wheatley +35 more
TL;DR: Patients who require massive transfusion can be predicted early, and persistent low StO2 identifies those MT patients destined to have poor outcome, and new strategies to improve outcome are tested.
Journal ArticleDOI
Early hypothermia in severely injured trauma patients is a significant risk factor for multiple organ dysfunction syndrome but not mortality.
Gregory J. Beilman,Juan J. Blondet,Teresa Nelson,Avery B. Nathens,Frederick A. Moore,Peter Rhee,Juan Carlos Puyana,Ernest E. Moore,Stephen M. Cohn +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship of early hypothermia to multiple organ failure and mortality in a prospectively-collected database of severely injured trauma patients was evaluated. But, the authors did not evaluate the relationship among different types of organ failure.
Journal ArticleDOI
Continuous noninvasive tissue oximetry in the early evaluation of the combat casualty: a prospective study.
Alec C. Beekley,Matthew J. Martin,Teresa Nelson,Kurt W. Grathwohl,Matthew E. Griffith,Gregory J. Beilman,John B. Holcomb +6 more
TL;DR: NIRS-derived StO2 obtained on arrival predicts the need for blood transfusion in casualties who initially seem to be hemodynamically stable (SBP >90), and further study of this technology for use in the resuscitation of trauma patients is warranted.
Journal ArticleDOI
Meta-analysis of clinical efficacy of pulsed radio frequency energy treatment.
TL;DR: On the basis of statistical evaluation of published clinical efficacy data, there is strong statistical evidence that PRFE therapy is effective in the treatment of postoperative and nonpostoperative pain and edema and in WH applications.