Dr. Nicholas Dino Caputo M.D., M.SC.
Emergency Physician
622 W 168th St Ph 1-137 New York NY, 10032About
Dr. Nicholas Caputo practices Emergency Medicine in New York, NY. Dr. Caputo assesses patients who seek immediate medical attention at any time of day or night. Emergency Medicine Physicians are trained to efficiently work with each patient and situation no matter how acute or life-threatening. Dr. Caputo examines patients, determines means of testing, diagnoses conditions, and decides the best treatment methods.
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Troponin T expression in trout red muscle correlates with muscle activation.
- Spontaneous resolution of a large traumatic pneumothorax.
- Re-evaluating the diagnostic accuracy of the tongue blade test: still useful as a screening tool for mandibular fractures?
- A proposed novel algorithmic approach to the evaluation of the acutely injured trauma patient: should advanced trauma life support incorporate biomarkers?
- Intraosseous access in trauma by air medical retrieval teams.
- Whole-body computed tomographic scanning leads to better survival as opposed to selective scanning in trauma patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Placement of a central venous catheter in the antecubital vein using a modified seldinger technique.
- Noninvasive ventilation during procedural sedation in the ED: a case series.
- Determining the utility of metabolic acidosis for trauma patients in the emergency department.
- Comparing biomarkers of traumatic shock: the utility of anion gap, base excess, and serum lactate in the ED.
- Twenty-four-hour packed red blood cell requirement is the strongest independent prognostic marker of mortality in ED trauma patients.
- The effect of the apneic period on the respiratory physiology of patients undergoing intubation in the ED.
- Waveform capnography: an alternative to physician gestalt in determining optimal intubating conditions after administration of paralytic agents.
- Peri-intubation factors affecting emergency physician choice of paralytic agent for rapid sequence intubation of trauma patients.
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