Andrew G. Day
Queen's University
280 Papers
1.2K Citations
Andrew G. Day is an academic researcher from Queen's University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 251 publications. Previous affiliations of Andrew G. Day include Kingston General Hospital & University of Toronto.
Chat about Author
Papers
Interpregnancy Interval and Adverse Perinatal Outcomes: A Record-Linkage Study Using the Manitoba Population Research Data Repository
TL;DR: If the associations observed between the IPI and adverse perinatal outcomes in this large, population-based cohort are causal, birth spacing could form an important target of public health messaging in Canada.
23
Longitudinal increases in mitochondrial DNA levels in blood cells are associated with survival in critically ill patients
TL;DR: Blood mtDNA levels appeared initially low, increased over time in patients who ultimately survived, and remained low in those who did not, consistent with mitochondrial recovery being associated with survival and warrants further investigation as a marker of mitochondrial alterations and outcome in critical illness.
Effect of High-Dose Selenium on Postoperative Organ Dysfunction and Mortality in Cardiac Surgery Patients
Christian Stoppe,Bernard McDonald,Patrick Meybohm,Kenneth B. Christopher,Stephen E. Fremes,Richard P. Whitlock,Siamak Mohammadi,Dimitri Kalavrouziotis,Gunnar Elke,Rolf Rossaint,Philipp Helmer,Kai Zacharowski,Ulf Günther,Matteo Parotto,Bernd Niemann,Andreas Böning,C. David Mazer,Philip M. Jones,Marion Ferner,Yoan Lamarche,Francois Lamontagne,Oliver J. Liakopoulos,Matthew J Cameron,M Müller,Alexander Zarbock,Maria Wittmann,Andreas Goetzenich,Erich Kilger,Lutz Schomburg,Andrew G. Day,Daren K. Heyland +30 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a randomized clinical trial assesses the ability of high-dose intravenous sodium selenite treatment to reduce postoperative organ dysfunction and mortality in cardiac surgery patients.
23
Comparative reliability of structured versus unstructured interviews in the admission process of a residency program.
TL;DR: A structured interview did not yield a higher overall reliability than both unstructured interviews, and the lower reliability is explained by a lower interitem reliability, which in turn is due to the multidimensionality of the interview tool.
Automated Quantitative Analysis of p53, Cyclin D1, Ki67 and pERK Expression in Breast Carcinoma Does Not Differ from Expert Pathologist Scoring and Correlates with Clinico-Pathological Characteristics
Jamaica Cass,Sonal Varma,Andrew G. Day,Waheed Sangrar,Ashish B. Rajput,Leda Raptis,Jeremy A. Squire,Yolanda Madarnas,Sandip SenGupta,Bruce E. Elliott +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the reliability of automated immunohistochemistry (IHC) scoring compared to manual scoring of five selected biomarkers in a tissue microarray (TMA) of 63 human breast cancer cases, and correlate these markers with clinico-pathological data.
22