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Warren M. Zapol
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 423
Citations - 26610
Warren M. Zapol is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nitric oxide & Pulmonary hypertension. The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 418 publications receiving 25338 citations. Previous affiliations of Warren M. Zapol include Brigham and Women's Hospital & University of British Columbia.
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Book ChapterDOI
Inhaled Nitric Oxide: State-of-the-Art
TL;DR: During the past several years, remarkable progress has been made in understanding the nitric oxide-guanylate cyclase signal transduction system.
Journal ArticleDOI
Noninvasive assessment of myocardial perfusion in mice: a contrast echocardiography study
Marielle Scherrer-Crosbie,Wolfgang Steudel,Patrick Hunziker,Noah Liel-Cohen,Warren M. Zapol,Michael H. Picard +5 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Intratracheal injection of nitric oxide, generated from air by pulsed electrical discharge, for the treatment of pulmonary hypertension in awake ambulatory lambs
Binglan Yu,Francesco Zadek,Anna Fischbach,Steffen B Wiegand,Lorenzo Berra,Daniel Bloch,Warren M. Zapol +6 more
TL;DR: Transtracheal NO delivery may provide a long-term treatment for patients with chronic pulmonary hypertension as an outpatient without requiring a mask or tracheal intubation and produces vasodilation of the pulmonary vasculature of awake lambs with pulmonary hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nitric oxide in ARDS
Rolf Rossaint,Konrad J. Falke,M. Keitel,F. Lopez,Ulrich Pison,K. Slama,T. Grünina,K. Lewandowski,Warren M. Zapol,Warren M. Zapol,Wolfgang Steudel,Didier Payen,C. Gatecel,N. Guinard,V. Zegers de Beyl,Marc Leeman,E. Gilbert,Christian Melot,Robert Naeije,I. Rovira,Tong-Yan Chen,E. Greene,Jean-Dominique Law-Koune,M. Moutafis,Marc Fischler +24 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Differential changes of alveolar gas concentrations during anesthetic induction of a patient with an absent right pulmonary artery.
TL;DR: A 38-yr-old man with congenital right pulmonary artery agenesis, whose right lung was perfused with collateral systemic arterial blood, presented for right pneumonectomy with a likely difference in gas exchange, and results indicated a higher end-tidal CO2 from the left, normally perfuse, lung than from the right, systemically perfused, lung.