Khaled D. Algarni
King Saud University
32 Papers
87 Citations
Khaled D. Algarni is an academic researcher from King Saud University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 23 publications. Previous affiliations of Khaled D. Algarni include University Health Network & Toronto General Hospital.
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Papers
Clinical, biochemical, and genetic predictors of coronary artery bypass graft failure
Bobby Yanagawa,Khaled D. Algarni,Khaled D. Algarni,Steve K. Singh,Saswata Deb,Jessica Vincent,Randi Elituv,Nimesh D. Desai,Karthikeyan Rajamani,Bruce M. McManus,Peter P. Liu,Eric A. Cohen,Sam Radhakrishnan,James Dubbin,Leonard Schwartz,Stephen E. Fremes +15 more
TL;DR: Diabetes was identified as a potential clinical predictor and plasma fibrinogen, creatinine, and high-density lipoprotein as potential novel biomarkers, which might help risk stratify patients for the development of graft failure.
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Microplegia During Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Was Associated With Less Low Cardiac Output Syndrome: A Propensity-Matched Comparison
Khaled D. Algarni,Khaled D. Algarni,Richard D. Weisel,Christopher A. Caldarone,Manjula Maganti,Katherine Tsang,Terrence M. Yau +6 more
TL;DR: Compared with 8:1 blood cardioplegia, microplegia during isolated CABG surgery was associated with a lower incidence of postoperative low cardiac output syndrome and may reduce postoperative cardiac edema, increase buffering, and permit more rapid recovery of ventricular function.
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Degree of right ventricular dysfunction dictates outcomes after tricuspid valve repair concomitant with left-side valve surgery.
Khaled D. Algarni,Amr A. Arafat,Abdulaziz D. Algarni,Juan J. Alfonso,Abdulaziz Alhossan,Abdelhameed Elsayed,Hatim Kheirallah,Turki B. Albacker +7 more
TL;DR: Moderate and severe RV dysfunction were independent predictors of poor long-term survival after tricuspid valve repair for secondary TR concomitant with left-side valve surgery.
15
Pain perception assessment using the short-form McGill pain questionnaire after cardiac surgery.
Hussam A Alharbi,Monirah A Albabtain,Nourah Alobiad,Jomanah Aba Alhasan,Maram Alruhaimi,Muzun Alnefisah,Samar Alateeq,Haneen Alghosoon,Sumaiah J. Alarfaj,Amr A. Arafat,Khaled D. Algarni +10 more
TL;DR: Pain decreased the second day after cardiac surgery compared to day 1 and paracetamol was the most prescribed analgesic; however, there was an underutilization which might be affected by insufficient pain reporting.
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Outcomes of isolated reoperative coronary artery bypass grafting in elderly patients.
TL;DR: The purpose was to study the risk profile and hospital outcomes of isolated reoperative CABG in elderly patients (75 years and older) compared to isolated primary CABGs in the same age group.
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