David E. Meyer
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
37 Papers
36 Citations
David E. Meyer is an academic researcher from University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 28 publications. Previous affiliations of David E. Meyer include University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio & Texas Medical Center.
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Papers
Every minute counts: Time to delivery of initial massive transfusion cooler and its impact on mortality.
David E. Meyer,David E. Meyer,Laura Vincent,Erin E. Fox,Terence O'Keeffe,Kenji Inaba,Eileen M. Bulger,John B. Holcomb,Bryan A. Cotton +8 more
TL;DR: Delays in MT protocol activation and delays in initial cooler arrival were associated with prolonged time to achieve hemostasis and an increase in mortality.
The why and how our trauma patients die: A prospective Multicenter Western Trauma Association study.
Rachael A. Callcut,Lucy Z. Kornblith,Amanda S. Conroy,Anamaria J. Robles,Jonathan P Meizoso,Nicholas Namias,David E. Meyer,Amanda Haymaker,Michael S. Truitt,Vaidehi Agrawal,James M. Haan,Kelly L. Lightwine,John M Porter,Janika San Roman,Walter L. Biffl,Michael S Hayashi,Michael J Sise,Jayraan Badiee,Gustavo Recinos,Kenji Inaba,Thomas J Schroeppel,Emma Callaghan,Julie A Dunn,Samuel Godin,Robert C. McIntyre,Erik D. Peltz,Patrick J OʼNeill,Conrad Diven,Aaron M Scifres,Emily Switzer,Michael West,Sarah Storrs,Daniel C. Cullinane,John F. Cordova,Ernest E. Moore,Hunter B. Moore,Alicia Privette,Evert A. Eriksson,Mitchell J. Cohen +38 more
TL;DR: Exsanguination remains the predominant early primary COD with TBI accounting for most deaths at later time points with TBO as the most common later COD.
166
Safety profile and impact of low-titer group O whole blood for emergency use in trauma
James B. Williams,Nicholas Merutka,David E. Meyer,Yu Bai,Samuel Prater,Rodolfo Cabrera,John B. Holcomb,Charles E. Wade,Joseph D. Love,Bryan A. Cotton +9 more
TL;DR: LTO-WB has similar evidence of laboratory hemolysis, similar transfusion reaction rates, and is associated with a reduction in post-ED transfusions and increase likelihood of survival, controlling for age, severity of injury and prehospital physiology.
163
A comparison of resuscitation intensity and critical administration threshold in predicting early mortality among bleeding patients: A multicenter validation in 680 major transfusion patients.
David E. Meyer,Bryan A. Cotton,Erin E. Fox,Deborah M. Stein,John B. Holcomb,Mitchell J. Cohen,Kenji Inaba,Elaheh Rahbar +7 more
TL;DR: Both RI and CAT are valid surrogates for early mortality in patients undergoing major transfusion, capturing patients omitted by the MT definition, and RI4+ is more comprehensive.
•Journal Article
Army Ranger casualty, attrition, and surgery rates for airborne operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Russ S Kotwal,David E. Meyer,Kevin C. O’Connor,Bruce A Shahbaz,Troy R. Johnson,Raymond A. Sterling,Robert B. Wenzel +6 more
TL;DR: Examination of observed airborne casualty, attrition, and surgery rates in U.S. Army Rangers during combat operations in order to identify risk factors attributed to static-line parachute injuries and provide a comparison to estimated attrition rates finds risk factors associated with military parachuting recommend integration into current models.
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