Thursday, 23 May 2013

Four Medical Articles Written by Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado

The field of medicine has seen rapid advancements. It is amazing how far doctors and scientists have come in one century in terms of understanding the makeup and spread of infectious diseases. A number of health advancements have been made in diseases but also in medical practices. All of this is thanks to doctors who research different topics as they relate to the field of health and medicine.

Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado is a doctor and resident Anesthesiologist. Like many of his colleagues, he too performs medical research. A person doesn't have to be a doctor to research and publish their medical findings either. Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado began researching different medical topics as while he was still a medical student.

The first article Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado helped author for publication was about HIV and mortality. He and four other individuals worked to write an article published in the medical journal called Blood in 2006. The medical article was titled; " Causes of Death in the Highly Active Antiretroviral (HAART) Era: A Retrospective Comparison between a Hybrid HIV and Hematology/Oncology Practice and the Adult & Adolescent Spectrum of HIV-related Diseases (ASD) Project."

Since then, Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado helped author two other medical articles regarding HIV and mortality. In 2006, "HIV Associated Mortality in the HAART Era" was published in AIDS Reader. In 2008, Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado helped author, "Causes of Death in the Era of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART): A Retrospective Analysis of a Hybrid Hematology-Oncology and HIV Practice and the Seattle/King County Adult/Adolescent Spectrum of HIV-related Diseases (ASD) Project" which was published in the American Journal of the Medical Sciences.

Matthew Uhlenkott of Aurora, Colorado continues to research and publish his findings. His most recent medical article was published in 2012. Appearing in the Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesia, the article is about enhancing the safety of axillary vein catheterization in neurosurgical intensive care patients.

No comments:

Post a Comment