Dr. Norman Alan Paradis M.D.
Emergency Physician
14022 Abby Wood Ct San Diego CA, 92131About
Dr. Norman Paradis practices Emergency Medicine in Lebanon, NH. Dr. Paradis 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. Paradis examines patients, determines means of testing, diagnoses conditions, and decides the best treatment methods.
Education and Training
Northwestern University The Feinberg School of Medicine 1984
Board Certification
Emergency MedicineAmerican Board of Emergency MedicineABEM
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Pressor drugs in the treatment of cardiac arrest.
- Tissue plasminogen activator in cardiac arrest with pulseless electrical activity.
- Spinal epidural hematoma complicating thrombolytic therapy with tissue plasminogen activator--a case report.
- Compared to angiotensin II, epinephrine is associated with high myocardial blood flow following return of spontaneous circulation after cardiac arrest.
- Pre-randomization and de-randomization in emergency medical research: new names and rigorous criteria for old methods.
- Impact of the Final Rule on the rate of clinical cardiac arrest research in the United States.
- Prehospital interventions to improve neurological outcome following cardiac arrest.
- Vasopressin alone or with epinephrine may be superior to epinephrine in a clinically relevant porcine model of pulseless electrical activity cardiac arrest.
- A swine model of pseudo-pulseless electrical activity induced by partial asphyxiation.
- Outcomes from low versus high-flow cardiopulmonary resuscitation in a swine model of cardiac arrest.
- Inhomogeneity and temporal effects in AutoPulse Assisted Prehospital International Resuscitation--an exception from consent trial terminated early.
- Coronary perfusion pressure during external chest compression in pseudo-EMD, comparison of systolic versus diastolic synchronization.
- Is this the next step for CPR?
- Should reperfusion be revisited?
- Instrument to detect syncope and the onset of shock.
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