J Heidt
13 Papers
119 Citations
J Heidt is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tidal volume & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 13 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Early determinants of long-term T-cell reconstitution after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for severe combined immunodeficiency
José A. M. Borghans,Robbert G. M. Bredius,Mette D. Hazenberg,Helene Roelofs,Els C. Jol-van der Zijde,J Heidt,Sigrid A. Otto,Taco W. Kuijpers,Willem E. Fibbe,Jaak M. Vossen,Frank Miedema,Maarten J. D. van Tol +11 more
TL;DR: Frequent monitoring of T-cell immunity and TREC numbers early after HSCT may serve to timely identify patients who will fail to reconstitute properly and who may need additional treatment, as well as identify patients with good immune reconstitution.
80
PReVENT - protective ventilation in patients without ARDS at start of ventilation: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Fabienne D. Simonis,Jan M. Binnekade,Annemarije Braber,H.P.M.M. Gelissen,J Heidt,Janneke Horn,Gerard Innemee,Evert de Jonge,Nicole P. Juffermans,Peter E. Spronk,Lotte Maria Gertruda Steuten,Pieter R. Tuinman,Marijn Vriends,Gwendolyn de Vreede,Rob B. P. de Wilde,Ary Serpa Neto,Marcelo Gama de Abreu,Paolo Pelosi,Marcus J. Schultz +18 more
TL;DR: PReVENT is the first randomized controlled trial comparing a low tidal volume strategy with a high tidalVolume strategy, in patients without ARDS at onset of ventilation, that recruits a sufficient number of patients to test the hypothesis that a low tides volume strategy benefits patients withoutARDS with regard to a clinically relevant endpoint.
•Journal Article
Thalidomide as treatment for digestive tract angiodysplasias.
TL;DR: An 80-year-old man with von Willebrand's disease was admitted with severe melaena and treatment with thalidomide was restarted with a successful outcome.
34
•Journal Article
A rare bloodstream infection: Bacillus mycoides.
TL;DR: This is the first report on bloodstream infection with Bacillus mycoides in a human patient and it is hypothesised that this patient was colonised from the freights of his barge, and bloodstream infection occurred during resuscitation with either the bacterium itself or its spores.
6
A rare cause of occlusion of the brachiocephalic trunk, resulting in fatal stroke: arterial thoracic outlet syndrome
J Heidt,L de Beer,GC Admiraal +2 more
- 01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: The patient died the following day, and it was concluded that she had suffered from arterial thoracic outlet syndrome due to bilateral cervical ribs, which resulted in a fatal stroke due to the rare complication of retrograde thromboembolic occlusion of the brachiocephalic trunk.
4