Use of Pulse Co-Oximetry as a Screening and Monitoring Tool in Mass Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

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2010-01

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10.3109/10903120903349853

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Bledsoe, Bryan E, Kevin Nowicki, James H Creel, Dale Carrison and Harry W Severance (2010). Use of Pulse Co-Oximetry as a Screening and Monitoring Tool in Mass Carbon Monoxide Poisoning. Prehospital Emergency Care, 14(1). pp. 131–133. 10.3109/10903120903349853 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11089.

This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.

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Severance

Harry Wells Severance

Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine

Site Principle Investigator: PROspective Multicenter Imaging Study for Evaluation of Chest Pain (PROMISE) prospective, randomized, multi-center clinical trial:

Principle Investigator - Duke E.D. Site - "Speed" Study. Pilot phase of Gusto IV. Investigating Abciximab (a GP IIb-IIIa inhibitor) in combination with rapid access to cardiac cath. Funded through Duke Clinical Research Institute. Multi-center trial.

Principle Investigator - Project: proposed mechanisms for afferent pain transmission from myocardial cells to pain centers. Purpose is to identify potential biochemical markers for early anginal presentations. Funded: grants received from Merck & Co. and Roche-Boehringer-Mannheim. Pilot phase paper - in preparation.


Other Interest Areas:
Blasts/Ballistics
Wounding and medical management of penetrating injuries derived from firearms and blast-related injuries.

Impact of Observation/short-stay strategies on clinical care and inpatient/outpatient systems.

Impact of Emerging Viral Threats on clinical management and social/economic/political systems,

Acute Cardiology - Chest Pain Presentations 
Evolving Technology and AI in improving clinical care/management


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