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Dive into the research topics where Hari Radhakrishnan is active.

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Featured researches published by Hari Radhakrishnan.


Critical Care Medicine | 2007

Hypertonic saline reverses stiffness in a Sprague-Dawley rat model of acute intestinal edema, leading to improved intestinal function

Ravi S. Radhakrishnan; Hari Radhakrishnan; Hasen Xue; Stacey D. Moore-Olufemi; Anshu B. Mathur; Norman W. Weisbrodt; Frederick A. Moore; Steven J. Allen; Glen A. Laine; Charles S. Cox

Introduction:Acute edema induced by resuscitation and mesenteric venous hypertension impairs intestinal transit and contractility and reduces intestinal stiffness. Pretreatment with hypertonic saline (HS) can prevent these changes. Changes in tissue stiffness have been shown to trigger signaling cascades via stress fiber formation. We proposed that acute intestinal edema leads to a decrease in intestinal transit that may be mediated by changes in stiffness, leading to stress fiber formation and decreased intestinal transit. Furthermore, HS administration will abolish these detrimental effects of edema. Results:Intestinal edema causes a significant increase in tissue water and a significant decrease in intestinal transit and stiffness compared with sham. HS reversed these changes to sham levels. In addition, tissue edema led to significant stress fiber formation and decreased numbers of focal contacts. HS preserved tissue stiffness, prevented stress fiber formation, and was associated with improved intestinal function. Conclusion:HS eliminates intestinal tissue edema formation and improves intestinal transit. In addition, the action of HS may be mediated through its preservation of tissue stiffness, which leads to prevention of signaling via stress fiber formation, leading to preserved intestinal function. Finally, intestinal edema may provide a novel physiologic model for examining stiffness and stress fiber signaling.


American Journal of Surgery | 2013

Evaluation of noninvasive hemoglobin measurements in trauma patients

Laura J. Moore; Charles E. Wade; Laura Vincent; Jeanette M. Podbielski; Elizabeth A. Camp; Deborah J. del Junco; Hari Radhakrishnan; James J. McCarthy; Brijesh S. Gill; John B. Holcomb

BACKGROUND Reliable, accurate, noninvasive, and continuous determination of hemoglobin would be an important advance in the care of trauma patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the utility of the Masimo Radical 7 device in severely injured trauma patients. METHODS Highest level trauma activation patients were enrolled over a 1-year period. Laboratory hemoglobin values were compared with Masimo hemoglobin values using Bland-Altman analysis. RESULTS A total of 525 patients were enrolled in the study. Comparison of 861 paired values from 418 patients showed a variance of 3.89 to -3.84 g/dL, showing a nonsignificant correlation between Masimo hemoglobin and laboratory hemoglobin values. CONCLUSIONS The Masimo Radical 7 system evaluated in this study holds promise, but it is not ready to be used as an initial noninvasive evaluation tool in the acute treatment of severely injured trauma patients. There was a poor correlation between Masimo hemoglobin and laboratory hemoglobin and large numbers of missing data. On the basis of the poor correlation, the Masimo Radical 7 device cannot currently be used to guide transfusion therapy.


Critical Care Medicine | 2009

Hypertonic saline alters hydraulic conductivity and up-regulates mucosal/submucosal aquaporin 4 in resuscitation-induced intestinal edema

Ravi S. Radhakrishnan; Shinil K. Shah; Samuel Lance; Hari Radhakrishnan; Hasen Xue; Geetha L. Radhakrishnan; Uma Ramaswamy; Peter A. Walker; Karen S. Uray; Glen A. Laine; Randolph H. Stewart; Charles S. Cox

Objective:To characterize membrane conductivity by applying mathematical modeling techniques and immunohistochemistry and to localize and predict areas of the bowel where aquaporins may be associated with edema resolution/prevention associated with hypertonic saline. Intestinal edema induced by resuscitation and mesenteric venous hypertension impairs intestinal transit/contractility. Hypertonic saline decreases intestinal edema and improves transit. Aquaporins are water transport membrane proteins that may be up-regulated with edema and/or hypertonic saline. Design:Laboratory study. Setting:University research laboratory. Subjects:Male Sprague Dawley rats, weighing 270 to 330 g. Interventions:Rats were randomized to control (with and without hypertonic saline) and mesenteric venous hypertension with either 80 mL/kg normal saline (RESUS + VH + VEH) or 80 mL/kg normal saline with hypertonic saline (RESUS + VH + HTS). After 6 hrs, intestinal wet/dry ratios, urine output, peritoneal fluid, and intraluminal fluid were measured. Hydraulic conductivity was calculated from our previously known and published pressure-flow data. The cDNA microarray, Western blot, polymerase chain reaction, and immunohistochemistry studies were conducted for candidate aquaporins and distribution in intestinal edema resolution. Measurements and Main Results:Hypertonic saline decreased edema and increased urine, intraluminal, and peritoneal fluid volume. RESUS + VH favors fluid flux into the interstitium. Hypertonic saline causes increased hydraulic conductivity at the seromuscular and mucosal surfaces at the same time limiting flow into the interstitium. This is associated with increased aquaporin 4 expression in the intestinal mucosa and submucosa. Conclusions:Hypertonic saline mitigates intestinal edema development and promotes fluid redistribution secondary to increased membrane conductivity at the mucosal and seromuscular surfaces. This is associated with up-regulation of aquaporin 4 gene expression and protein. Aquaporin 4 may be a useful therapeutic target for strategies to enhance edema resolution.


Shock | 2008

Pretreatment with bone morphogenetic protein-7 (BMP-7) mimics ischemia preconditioning following intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury in the intestine and liver.

Ravi S. Radhakrishnan; Geetha L. Radhakrishnan; Hari Radhakrishnan; Hasen Xue; Sasha D. Adams; Stacey D. Moore-Olufemi; Matthew T. Harting; Charles S. Cox; Bruce C. Kone

Intestinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury has been shown to cause intestinal mucosal injury and adversely affect function. Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) has been shown to protect against intestinal I/R injury by reducing polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration, intestinal mucosal injury, and liver injury, and preserve intestinal transit. Bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP-7) has been shown to protect against I/R injury in the kidney and brain. Recently, microarray analysis has been used to examine the possible IPC candidate pathways. This work revealed that IPC may work through upregulation of BMP-7. The purpose of this study was to examine if pretreatment with BMP-7 would replicate the effects seen with IPC in the intestine and liver after intestinal I/R. Rats were randomized to six groups: sham, I/R (30min of superior mesenteric artery occlusion and 6 h of R), IPC+R (three cycles of superior mesenteric artery occlusion for 4 min and R for 10 min), IPC+I/R, BMP-7+R (100 &mgr;m/kg recombinant human BMP-7), or BMP-7+I/R. A duodenal catheter was placed, and 30 min before sacrifice, fluorescein isothiocyanate-Dextran was injected. At sacrifice, dye concentrations were measured to determine intestinal transit. Ileal mucosal injury was determined by histology and myeloperoxidase activity was used as a marker of polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration. Serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase were measured at sacrifice to determine liver injury. Pretreatment with BMP-7 significantly improved intestinal transit and significantly decreased intestinal mucosal injury and serum aspartate aminotransferase levels, comparable to animals undergoing IPC. In conclusion, BMP-7 protected against intestinal I/R-induced intestinal and liver injury. Bone morphogenetic protein 7 may be a more logical surrogate to IPC in the prevention of injury in the setting of intestinal I/R.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2014

Prehospital triage of trauma patients using the Random Forest computer algorithm

Michelle Scerbo; Hari Radhakrishnan; Bryan A. Cotton; Anahita Dua; Deborah J. del Junco; Charles E. Wade; John B. Holcomb


Journal of Surgical Research | 2013

Utilization of the Random Forest Algorithm to Predict Trauma Patient Disposition Based on Pre-hospital Variables

Michelle Scerbo; Hari Radhakrishnan; Bryan A. Cotton; Anahita Dua; D. DelJunco; Charles E. Wade; John B. Holcomb


Archive | 2014

SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR DETERMINING TRIAGE CATEGORIES

Hari Radhakrishnan; Michelle Scerbo; John B. Holcomb; Charles E. Wade


Archive | 2014

SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR A PATIENT DASHBOARD

Hari Radhakrishnan; John B. Holcomb; Charles E. Wade; Bryan A. Cotton; Rondel Albarado; Drew Kraus; Joel Watts; Binod Shrestha


Journal of Critical Care | 2013

An advanced algorithm for predicting mortality using simple parameters obtained early in the hospitalization of a trauma patient

Hari Radhakrishnan; John A. Harvin; Matthew J. Pommerening; Charles E. Wade; John B. Holcomb


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2011

A novel Bayesian algorithm to predict massive transfusion in patients receiving trauma laparotomy

Hari Radhakrishnan; Bryan A. Cotton; Eric M. LeFebvre; Deborah J. del Junco; Charles E. Wade; John B. Holcomb

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Charles E. Wade

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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John B. Holcomb

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Ravi S. Radhakrishnan

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Bryan A. Cotton

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Charles S. Cox

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Hasen Xue

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Deborah J. del Junco

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Michelle Scerbo

University of Texas System

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