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Dive into the research topics where Fernando J. Martinez is active.

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Featured researches published by Fernando J. Martinez.


Chest | 2008

Continuous oxygen use in nonhypoxemic emphysema patients identifies a high-risk subset of patients: retrospective analysis of the National Emphysema Treatment Trial.

Michael B. Drummond; Amanda Blackford; Joshua O. Benditt; Barry J. Make; Frank C. Sciurba; Meredith C. McCormack; Fernando J. Martinez; Henry E. Fessler; Alfred P. Fishman; Robert A. Wise

BACKGROUNDnContinuous oxygen therapy is not recommended for emphysema patients who are not hypoxemic at rest, although it is often prescribed. Little is known regarding the clinical characteristics and survival of nonhypoxemic emphysema patients using continuous oxygen. Analysis of data from the National Emphysema Treatment Trial (NETT) offers insight into this population.nnnMETHODSnWe analyzed demographic and clinical characteristics of 1,215 participants of NETT, stratifying by resting PaO(2) and reported oxygen use. Eight-year survival was evaluated in individuals randomized to medical therapy.nnnRESULTSnAt enrollment, 33.8% (n = 260) of participants nonhypoxemic at rest reported continuous oxygen use. When compared to nonhypoxemic individuals not using oxygen (n = 226), those using continuous oxygen had worse dyspnea, lower quality of life, more frequent exercise desaturation, and higher case-fatality rate. After adjusting for age, body mass index, and FEV(1) percentage of predicted, the presence of exercise desaturation accounted for the differential mortality seen between these groups.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIn the NETT, the use of continuous oxygen in resting nonhypoxemic emphysema patients was associated with worse disease severity and survival. The differential survival observed could nearly all be accounted for by the higher prevalence of exercise desaturation in those using continuous oxygen, suggesting that it is not a harmful effect of oxygen therapy contributing to mortality. It remains unclear whether continuous oxygen therapy improves survival in normoxic patients with exercise desaturation.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2008

Natural History of Emphysema

Omar A. Minai; Joshua O. Benditt; Fernando J. Martinez

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a progressive disease with studies of disease progression generally focusing on measures of airflow and mortality. In nonsmokers, maximal lung function is attained around age 15 to 25 years, and after a variable plateau phase, subsequently declines at approximately 20 to 25 ml/year. Smoking may reduce the maximal FEV(1) achieved, shorten or eliminate the plateau phase, and may accelerate the rate of decline in lung function in a dose-dependent manner. Some smokers are predisposed to more rapid declines in lung function than others, and recent reports suggest that females may be at higher risk of lung damage related to smoke exposure than males. Progressive deterioration in dyspnea, functional status, and health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients with COPD is well known, but the magnitude and rate of decline and its association with severity of airflow obstruction remains poorly defined. Many studies have identified pulmonary function, in particular the FEV(1), as the single best predictor of survival. An impaired diffusing capacity and overall impairment in functional status have also been associated with impaired survival in COPD. The National Emphysema Treatment Trial has provided additional insight into these features in a large, well-characterized group of patients with severe airflow obstruction and structural emphysema.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2008

Assessment of Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Barry J. Make; Fernando J. Martinez

Assessment of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is important to establish an accurate diagnosis, assist in making therapeutic decisions, measuring outcomes for clinical and research purposes, and determining prognosis. Chest computed tomography (CT) scans are useful in patients who present with airflow limitation and clinical features suggestive of COPD but in whom other diagnoses are being considered. In such cases, a chest CT may indicate another diagnosis. The amount and distribution of emphysema can identify outcomes from lung volume reduction surgery, and chest CT scans are mandatory in assessment of patients for this surgery. Quantitative parameters from chest CT scans have been used to define longitudinal progression of disease. Assessment of patients with COPD for both clinical and research purposes should incorporate a variety of different outcomes. There are outcome measures that have been successfully incorporated in large clinical trials, and the design and outcomes of these trials can be used to plan future clinical investigations in COPD.


Archive | 2003

American Thoracic Society/ American College of Chest Physicians ATS/ACCP Statement on Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing

Idelle Weisman; Darcy Marciniuk; Fernando J. Martinez; Frank C. Sciurba; Darryl Y. Sue; Brian J. Whipp; Jorge Zeballos


Archive | 2010

COPD Phenotypes: The Future of COPD

Meilan K. Han; Alvar Agusti; Peter Ma Calverley; Bartolome Celli; Gerard J. Criner; Jeffrey L. Curtis; Leonardo Fabbri; Jonathan Goldin; Paul W. Jones; William MacNee; Barry J. Make; Klaus F. Rabe; Stephen I. Rennard; Frank C. Sciurba; Edwin K. Silverman; Jørgen Vestbo; George R. Washko; Fernando J. Martinez; Reggio Emilia


Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (Miami, Fla.) | 2016

Insight into Best Variables for COPD Case Identification: A Random Forests Analysis

Nancy Kline Leidy; Karen G. Malley; Anna W. Steenrod; David Mannino; Barry J. Make; Russ P. Bowler; Byron M. Thomashow; R. G. Barr; Stephen I. Rennard; Julia F. Houfek; Barbara P. Yawn; Meilan K. Han; Catherine A. Meldrum; Elizabeth D. Bacci; John W. Walsh; Fernando J. Martinez


Archive | 2011

The NETT: Part I - Lessons Learned about Emphysema

Gerard J. Criner; Francis Cordova; Alice L. Sternberg; Fernando J. Martinez


Archive | 2017

Respiratory Symptoms Items from the COPD Assessment Test IdentifyEver-Smokers with Preserved Lung Function at Higher Risk for PoorRespiratory Outcomes

Carlos A. Martinez; Susan Murray; R. Graham Barr; Eugene R. Bleecker; Russell P. Bowler; Sephanie A. Christenson; Alejandro P. Comellas; Christopher B. Cooper; David Couper; Gerard J. Criner; Jeffrey L. Curtis; Mark T. Dransfield; Nadia N. Hansel; Eric A. Hoffman; Richard E. Kanner; Eric Kleerup; Jerry A. Krishnan; Stephen Lazarus; Nancy Kline Leidy; Wanda O'Neal; Fernando J. Martinez; Robert Paine; Stephen I. Rennard; Donald P. Tashkin; Prescott G. Woodruff; Meilan K. Han


Archive | 2017

TheSensitivity ofHigh-Resolution CTin Detecting Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis ProvedbyOpenLung Biopsy* AProspective Study

Jonathan B. Orens; Ella A. Kazerooni; Fernando J. Martinez; Jeffrey L. Curtis; Barry H. Gross; P. Lynch


Barcelona Respiratory Network | 2017

Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) Revisions 2001-2017: Historical and Critical Perspective

C Vogelmeier; Gerard J. Criner; Fernando J. Martinez

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Leonardo Fabbri

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

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Stephen I. Rennard

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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