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Trevor Adams

Researcher at Seattle Children's

Publications -  6
Citations -  1222

Trevor Adams is an academic researcher from Seattle Children's. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hypoxemia & Retrospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 585 citations. Previous affiliations of Trevor Adams include University of Washington.

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Explainable Machine-Learning Predictions for the Prevention of Hypoxaemia During Surgery

TL;DR: The results suggest that if anaesthesiologists currently anticipate 15% of hypoxaemia events, with the assistance of this system they could anticipate 30%, a large portion of which may benefit from early intervention because they are associated with modifiable factors.
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Complications in Pediatric Regional Anesthesia: An Analysis of More than 100,000 Blocks from the Pediatric Regional Anesthesia Network.

Benjamin J. Walker, +55 more
- 01 Oct 2018 - 
TL;DR: A level of safety in pediatric regional anesthesia that is comparable to adult practice and confirms the safety of placing blocks under general anesthesia in children is demonstrated.
Posted ContentDOI

Explainable machine learning predictions to help anesthesiologists prevent hypoxemia during surgery

TL;DR: Using minute by minute EMR data from fifty thousand surgeries, a machine learning based system called Prescience is developed and tested that predicts real-time hypoxemia risk and presents an explanation of factors contributing to that risk during general anesthesia.
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Comparison between epidural and opioid analgesia for infants undergoing major abdominal surgery.

TL;DR: The experience with infants undergoing major abdominal surgery was reviewed to determine if epidural catheter use decreased anesthetic and opioid exposure and improved postoperative analgesia.
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The Use of Opioids for Treatment of Pediatric Neuropathic Pain: A Literature Review.

TL;DR: Clinical experience and typical risk versus benefit considerations suggest a limited, if any, role for using opioids to treat pediatric neuropathic pain.