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Institution

Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center

About: Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Stroke. The organization has 236 authors who have published 199 publications receiving 7405 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Most patients’ desires for spiritual exploration center in the decision making and coping processes that are in line with the genetic counseling scope of practice, and counselors should feel empowered to incorporate spiritual exploration into their patient conversations.
Abstract: Religion and spirituality (R/S) are important components of many individuals’ lives, and spirituality is often employed by women coping with pregnancy complications. To characterize how prenatal genetic counselors might address spiritual issues with patients, 283 English and Spanish speaking women receiving prenatal genetic counseling in Houston, Texas were surveyed post-counseling using both the Brief RCope and questions regarding interest in spiritual exploration. Genetic counselors were concurrently surveyed to identify religious/spiritual language used within sessions and perceived importance of R/S. Genetic counselors were significantly more likely to identify R/S as important to a patient when patients used religious/spiritual language (p < 0.001). Conversely, when no religious/spiritual terms were present, the counselor felt uncertain about the importance of R/S 63 % of the time. However, 67 % of patients reported that they felt comfortable sharing their faith as it relates to their pregnancy, and 93 % reported using positive religious coping. Less than 25 % reported a desire for overt religious actions such as prayer or scripture exploration. Therefore, most patients’ desires for spiritual exploration center in the decision making and coping processes that are in line with the genetic counseling scope of practice. Thus, counselors should feel empowered to incorporate spiritual exploration into their patient conversations.

16 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In cooperative patients with acute orbital wall fractures, the presence of 2 or more signs or symptoms is predictive of severe ocular trauma and necessitates the need for urgent ophthalmic consultation.
Abstract: PURPOSE Define incidence of severe ocular trauma in orbital fracture patients and determine if ocular signs and symptoms are useful predictors of severe ocular injuries. METHODS Retrospective chart review was performed on all patients with orbital fractures between April 1, 2013, and December 31, 2014. Patients were included if they had radiographic evidence of acute fracture of at least one orbital wall and were evaluated by the Ophthalmology service. Demographics, concurrent injury data, and symptoms and signs of ocular trauma were collected. Concurrent ocular injuries were grouped by severity. Predictive signs or symptoms for severe ocular trauma were identified by stepwise logistic regression analysis. The threshold point for predictive signs and symptoms was detected by a receiver operating characteristic (ROC). RESULTS Five-hundred-twelve patients were included. The most common mechanisms of injury were assault (39%), fall (25%), and motor vehicle accident (21%). The incidence of any concurrent ocular trauma was 75% (383/512), with 14% (70/512) being severe. Four signs and symptoms were predictors of severity: blurred vision (P < 0.0001), pain with eye movements (P < 0.0001), visual acuity worse than 20/40 in the ipsilateral eye (P < 0.001), and restricted motility (P < 0.001). The presence of 2 or more of these signs or symptoms was predictive of severe ocular trauma with high sensitivity (91%) and specificity (86%). CONCLUSIONS In cooperative patients with acute orbital wall fractures, the presence of 2 or more signs or symptoms is predictive of severe ocular trauma and necessitates the need for urgent ophthalmic consultation.Severe ocular injury associated with orbital wall fracture is more likely in patients with 2 or more ophthalmic signs or symptoms.

16 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There was no difference in the mean time from initiation of the infusion to the SBP goal between agents or in the secondary outcomes, and each agent should be considered based on the patient care needs of the institution.
Abstract: Objective:The aim of this study was to determine whether clevidipine (CLEV) achieved faster blood pressure control compared to nicardipine (NIC) in patients presenting with either an acute ischemic stroke (AIS) or a spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH).Methods:This was a retrospective, observational, cohort study conducted in patients with AIS or ICH admitted to the emergency department of a Comprehensive Stroke Center from November 2011 to June 2013 who received CLEV or NIC continuous infusion for acute blood pressure management.Results:The study included 210 patients: 70 in the CLEV group and 140 in the NIC group. There was no difference in mean time (standard deviation [SD]) from initiation of the infusion to goal systolic blood pressure (SBP), CLEV: 50 (83) minutes versus NIC: 74 (103) minutes, P = .101. Comparison of the 2 agents within diagnosis showed no difference. Hypotension developed in 5 (7.1%) CLEV patients versus 14 (10%) NIC patients (P = .003). There was no difference in the percenta...

16 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a rigorous mathematical approach for deriving a pressure field from experimental data for a velocity field that can be obtained by direct measurement, and computed dissipation, kinetic energy and pressure are then presented in an idealized geometry, but relevant to a realistic geometry, with a symmetric stenosis.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review focuses on risk factors and pathophysiology of CAV, the role of statin Therapy in heart transplantation, and the potential added benefit of more intense statin therapy to limit the progression of this graft-limiting complication.

15 citations


Authors

Showing all 236 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
James L. Abbruzzese11760952338
James C. Grotta10450346714
Frederick A. Moore9451335176
John H. Rex7922431123
Hazim J. Safi7426518767
Richard W. Smalling6128922223
Luis Ostrosky-Zeichner6021218699
James T. Willerson5927315362
John J. Kavanagh5828811124
Sean I Savitz5730912763
Susan M. Ramin5317510273
Charles D. Ericsson481617481
Michael Rosenblum482078777
Sean C. Blackwell482518213
L. Maximilian Buja472369632
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202115
202021
201919
201812
201726
201626