2 results match your criteria: "Wake Forest University School of Medicine and North Carolina Baptist Hospital[Affiliation]"
Am J Transplant
October 2005
Department of Pathology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine and North Carolina Baptist Hospital, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Massive immune hemolysis due to passenger lymphocyte-derived anti-D has not been reported in renal transplantation. A 50-year-old (B-positive) male received a dual deceased-donor kidney transplant (B-negative) for diabetic renal failure. Two weeks post-transplant, the patient developed severe hemolytic anemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnesthesiology
February 2000
Department of Anesthesiology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine and North Carolina Baptist Hospital, Winston-Salem, USA.
Background: Females have worse outcome than do males after coronary artery bypass grafting; however, gender effects on length of stay (LOS) outcomes, such as duration of intubation or intensive care unit (ICU) LOS, have not been evaluated previously. The authors hypothesized that adjustment for pertinent preoperative covariates would eliminate any significant effect of gender on duration of intubation, LOS in the ICU after extubation, total ICU LOS, postoperative (exclusive of ICU) LOS, or total postoperative LOS.
Methods: Patients undergoing elective or urgent primary coronary artery bypass grafting surgery at 51 academic health centers in 1995 and 1997 were studied.