J
Jose I. Suarez
Researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Publications - 163
Citations - 5226
Jose I. Suarez is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Neurointensive care. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 163 publications receiving 3728 citations. Previous affiliations of Jose I. Suarez include Medical University of South Carolina & Baylor College of Medicine.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Critical Care Management of Patients Following Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: Recommendations from the Neurocritical Care Society’s Multidisciplinary Consensus Conference
Michael N. Diringer,Thomas P. Bleck,J. Claude Hemphill,David K. Menon,Lori Shutter,Paul M. Vespa,Nicolas Bruder,E. Sander Connolly,Giuseppe Citerio,Daryl R. Gress,Daniel Hänggi,Brian L. Hoh,Giuseppe Lanzino,Peter D. Le Roux,Alejandro A. Rabinstein,Erich Schmutzhard,Nino Stocchetti,Jose I. Suarez,Miriam Treggiari,Ming Yuan Tseng,Mervyn D.I. Vergouwen,Stefan Wolf,Gregory J. Zipfel +22 more
TL;DR: Recommendations were developed based on literature review using the GRADE system, discussion integrating the literature with the collective experience of the participants and critical review by an impartial jury and emphasis was placed on the principle that recommendations should be based not only on the quality of the data but also tradeoffs and translation into practice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Intensive Blood-Pressure Lowering in Patients with Acute Cerebral Hemorrhage
Adnan I. Qureshi,Yuko Y. Palesch,William G. Barsan,Daniel F. Hanley,Chung Y. Hsu,Renee L. Martin,Claudia S. Moy,Robert Silbergleit,Thorsten Steiner,Jose I. Suarez,Kazunori Toyoda,Yongjun Wang,Haruko Yamamoto,Byung Woo Yoon +13 more
TL;DR: The treatment of participants with intracerebral hemorrhage to achieve a target systolic blood pressure of 110 to 139mm Hg did not result in a lower rate of death or disability than standard reduction to a target of 140 to 179 mm Hg.
Journal ArticleDOI
Stroke-Associated Pneumonia: Major Advances and Obstacles
TL;DR: The pathophysiology of SAP is likely explained by aspiration combined with stroke-induced immunodepression through complex humeral and neural pathways that include the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, parasympathetic and sympathetic systems.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Prospective Study of Neurologic Disorders in Hospitalized Patients With COVID-19 in New York City
Jennifer A. Frontera,Sakinah Sabadia,Rebecca Lalchan,Taolin Fang,Brent Flusty,Patricio Millar-Vernetti,Thomas Snyder,Stephen Berger,Dixon Yang,Andre Granger,Nicole Morgan,Palak Patel,Josef Gutman,Kara Melmed,Shashank Agarwal,Matthew Bokhari,Andres Andino,Eduard Valdes,Mirza Omari,Alexandra Kvernland,Kaitlyn Lillemoe,Sherry H.-Y. Chou,Molly McNett,Raimund Helbok,Shraddha Mainali,Ericka L. Fink,Courtney L. Robertson,Michelle E. Schober,Jose I. Suarez,Wendy C. Ziai,David K. Menon,Daniel Friedman,David Friedman,Manisha Holmes,Joshua Huang,Sujata Thawani,Jonathan Howard,Nada Abou-Fayssal,Penina Krieger,Ariane Lewis,Aaron Lord,Ting Zhou,D. Ethan Kahn,Barry M. Czeisler,Jose Torres,Shadi Yaghi,Koto Ishida,Erica Scher,Adam de Havenon,Dimitris G. Placantonakis,Mengling Liu,Thomas Wisniewski,Andrea B. Troxel,Laura J. Balcer,Steven L. Galetta +54 more
TL;DR: In this article, a prospective, multi-center, observational study of consecutive hospitalized adults in the NYC metropolitan area with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection was conducted to determine the prevalence and associated mortality of well defined neurologic diagnoses among COVID-19 patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Blood pressure control and clinical outcomes in acute intracerebral haemorrhage: a preplanned pooled analysis of individual participant data.
Tom J Moullaali,Tom J Moullaali,Xia Wang,Renee H Martin,Virginia B Shipes,Thompson G. Robinson,Thompson G. Robinson,John Chalmers,Jose I. Suarez,Adnan I Qureshi,Yuko Y. Palesch,Craig S. Anderson,Craig S. Anderson,Craig S. Anderson +13 more
TL;DR: The pooled analyses indicate that achieving early and stable systolic blood pressure seems to be safe and associated with favourable outcomes in patients with acute intracerebral haemorrhage of predominantly mild-to-moderate severity.