John J Marini

Summary

Affiliation: HealthPartners Research Foundation
Country: USA

Publications

  1. ncbi Unproven clinical evidence in mechanical ventilation
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, Minnesota, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 18:1-7. 2012
  2. ncbi Thirty years of critical care medicine
    Jean Louis Vincent
    Department of Intensive Care, Erasme Hospital, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Route de Lennik 808, 1070 Bruxelles, Belgium
    Crit Care 14:311. 2010
  3. ncbi Partitioning the work-sparing effects of partial ventilatory support in airflow obstruction
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, USA
    Crit Care 8:101-2. 2004
  4. ncbi Advances in the understanding of acute respiratory distress syndrome: summarizing a decade of progress
    John J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Pulmonary/Critical Care Division, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 10:265-71. 2004
  5. ncbi Reluctant horses at the digital river
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, USA
    Crit Care 8:313-4. 2004
  6. ncbi Limitations of clinical trials in acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 12:25-31. 2006
  7. ncbi A lung-protective approach to ventilating ARDS
    J J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, USA
    Respir Care Clin N Am 4:633-63, viii. 1998
  8. ncbi Ventilatory management of acute respiratory distress syndrome: a consensus of two
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Regions Hospital, St Paul 55101, USA
    Crit Care Med 32:250-5. 2004
  9. ncbi Propagation prevention: a complementary mechanism for "lung protective" ventilation in acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Saint Paul, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 36:3252-8. 2008
  10. ncbi Dynamic hyperinflation and auto-positive end-expiratory pressure: lessons learned over 30 years
    John J Marini
    Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN 55101 2595, USA
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 184:756-62. 2011

Detail Information

Publications60

  1. ncbi Unproven clinical evidence in mechanical ventilation
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, Minnesota, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 18:1-7. 2012
    ..To describe the management principles that have not been verified or tested but nonetheless successfully guide the logic of everyday practice at the bedside...
  2. ncbi Thirty years of critical care medicine
    Jean Louis Vincent
    Department of Intensive Care, Erasme Hospital, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Route de Lennik 808, 1070 Bruxelles, Belgium
    Crit Care 14:311. 2010
    ..We then look at the process of care and realize that, here, huge progress has been made. Lastly, we suggest how critical care medicine will continue to evolve for the better over the next 30 years...
  3. ncbi Partitioning the work-sparing effects of partial ventilatory support in airflow obstruction
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, USA
    Crit Care 8:101-2. 2004
    ..The effects of manipulating airway pressure in the setting of airflow obstruction depend heavily on the nature and severity of disease, as well as on the presence of airflow limitation during tidal breathing...
  4. ncbi Advances in the understanding of acute respiratory distress syndrome: summarizing a decade of progress
    John J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Pulmonary/Critical Care Division, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 10:265-71. 2004
  5. ncbi Reluctant horses at the digital river
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, USA
    Crit Care 8:313-4. 2004
    ..Whether their limitless promise will be embraced or forgone will depend as much on human as on technological practice...
  6. ncbi Limitations of clinical trials in acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 12:25-31. 2006
    ..To review the challenges and limitations of randomized clinical trials in acute respiratory distress syndrome, with special emphasis on those pertaining to ventilatory management...
  7. ncbi A lung-protective approach to ventilating ARDS
    J J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, USA
    Respir Care Clin N Am 4:633-63, viii. 1998
    ..This article reviews the basis for concern about traditional ventilatory support in ARDS and develops an approach based on current evidence and newer options for management...
  8. ncbi Ventilatory management of acute respiratory distress syndrome: a consensus of two
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Regions Hospital, St Paul 55101, USA
    Crit Care Med 32:250-5. 2004
    ..To synthesize the emerging body of experimental, observational, and clinical trial data into a practical guideline for safe and effective ventilatory management of acute respiratory distress syndrome...
  9. ncbi Propagation prevention: a complementary mechanism for "lung protective" ventilation in acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Saint Paul, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 36:3252-8. 2008
    ..To describe the clinical implications of an often neglected mechanism through which localized acute lung injury may be propagated and intensified...
  10. ncbi Dynamic hyperinflation and auto-positive end-expiratory pressure: lessons learned over 30 years
    John J Marini
    Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN 55101 2595, USA
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 184:756-62. 2011
    ..This discussion reviews some of the more important aspects of AP that bear on the care of the ventilated patient with critical illness...
  11. ncbi Acoustic monitoring--super sonics?
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, Minnesota Regions Hospital, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, MS11203B, 640 Jackson St, St Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Crit Care 13:162. 2009
    ..These emerging options complement current 'static/global' monitoring of mechanics and gas exchange with dynamic regional information long missing from the optimal care of the ventilated patient with critical illness...
  12. ncbi Can we prevent the spread of focal lung inflammation?
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 38:S574-81. 2010
    ....
  13. ncbi Spontaneously regulated vs. controlled ventilation of acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, St Paul, Minnesota, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 17:24-9. 2011
    ....
  14. ncbi Transient hemodynamic effects of recruitment maneuvers in three experimental models of acute lung injury
    Sung-Chul Lim
    Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine, Regions Hospital/HealthPartners, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Crit Care Med 32:2378-84. 2004
    ..The results imply that a lung recruiting maneuver should be used with caution, especially when using sustained inflation in the setting of pneumonia...
  15. ncbi Intercomparison of recruitment maneuver efficacy in three models of acute lung injury
    Sung-Chul Lim
    Department of Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine, Regions Hospital, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 32:2371-7. 2004
    ..Although RM may improve PaO2 in certain injury settings when traditional tidal volumes are used, sustained improvement depends on the post-RM positive end-expiratory pressure value...
  16. ncbi Time course of physiologic variables in response to ventilator-induced lung injury
    David J Dries
    Pulmonary Research Laboratory, Regions Hospital, St Paul, Minnesota, USA
    Respir Care 52:31-7. 2007
    ..Similarly, the regional topographies of pleural pressure and tissue edema have not been carefully mapped for this injury process...
  17. ncbi Cardiovascular and metabolic effects of high-dose insulin in a porcine septic shock model
    Joel S Holger
    Department of Emergency Medicine, Regions Hospital, St Paul, MN, USA
    Acad Emerg Med 17:429-35. 2010
    ..In an animal model of severe septic shock, this study compared the effects of HDI treatment to normal saline (NS) resuscitation alone...
  18. ncbi Tracheal gas insufflation during late exhalation efficiently reduces PaCO(2) in experimental acute lung injury
    Christopher Carter
    Regions Hospital, Pulmonary Research, 640 Jackson Street, St. Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Intensive Care Med 28:504-8. 2002
    ..These findings suggest that TGI is most effectively applied in a phasic manner in late expiration, with its duration titrated to effect...
  19. ncbi Agreement between functional residual capacity estimated via automated gas dilution versus via computed tomography in a pleural effusion model
    Jeronimo Graf
    Department of Pulmonary Research, Regions Hospital, 640 Jackson Street, St Paul MN 55101, USA
    Respir Care 55:1464-8. 2010
    ..We simultaneously evaluated FRC-CT and FRC determined by a ventilator-incorporated wash-in/wash-out (FRC-WI/WO) method in an animal model of unilateral pleural effusion that varied the fluid volume instilled and the applied PEEP...
  20. ncbi Pressure-flow signatures of central-airway mucus plugging
    Maryam Zamanian
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 34:223-6. 2006
    ..MAIN RESULTS: Four newly observed signs were recorded that may serve to identify occult central airway mucus plugging in the ventilated asthmatic patient...
  21. ncbi Lung injury--settle for a sketch or design a blueprint?
    John J Marini
    Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 36:2922-5. 2008
  22. ncbi Semi-quantitative tracking of intra-airway fluids by computed tomography
    Jeronimo Graf
    Pulmonary and Critical Care Research, Regions Hospital, St Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Clin Physiol Funct Imaging 29:406-13. 2009
    ..Airway secretions are a source of complications for patients with acute and chronic lung diseases, yet lack of techniques to quantitatively track secretions hampers research into clinical measures to reduce their pathologic consequences...
  23. ncbi The pragmatics of prone positioning
    Erica Messerole
    Department of Medicine, Regions Hospital and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 165:1359-63. 2002
  24. ncbi How best to recruit the injured lung?
    John J Marini
    Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Regions Hospital, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Crit Care 12:159. 2008
    ..Although a wide variety of recruiting maneuvers have been described, the technique that strikes the best balance between efficacy and risk may well vary among patients with differing right heart loading status and lung properties...
  25. ncbi Pulmonary microvascular fracture in a patient with acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John R Hotchkiss
    Department of Critical Care Medicine, Regions Hospital and University of Minnesota Medical School, St. Paul, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 30:2368-70. 2002
    ..FINDINGS: Multiple gross disruptions of the alveolar walls, suggestive of stress fractures. CONCLUSION: High-pressure mechanical ventilation may promote fracturing of the alveolar blood:airspace barrier...
  26. ncbi Bench-to-bedside review: microvascular and airspace linkage in ventilator-induced lung injury
    John J Marini
    Professor, University of Minnesota, Regions Hospital, St Paul, Minnesota, USA
    Crit Care 7:435-44. 2003
    ..Taking measures to lower vascular stress may offer a logical, but as yet unproven, extension of a lung-protective strategy for life support in ARDS...
  27. ncbi Do airway secretions play an underappreciated role in acute respiratory distress syndrome?
    Jeronimo Graf
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis St Paul, Minnesota, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 14:44-9. 2008
    ....
  28. ncbi Oscillations and noise: inherent instability of pressure support ventilation?
    John R Hotchkiss
    Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care and Section of Surgery, Regions Hospital and University of Minnesota, St Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 165:47-53. 2002
    ..In both mathematical and mechanical models, unstable behavior occurred at impedance values and ventilator settings that are clinically realistic...
  29. ncbi Dynamic behavior during noninvasive ventilation: chaotic support?
    J R Hotchkiss
    Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Regions Hospital and University of Minnesota, St Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 163:374-8. 2001
    ..The unstable behavior was observed in the simplest plausible mathematical models, and occurred at impedance values and ventilator settings that are clinically realistic...
  30. ncbi Static and dynamic pressure-volume curves reflect different aspects of respiratory system mechanics in experimental acute respiratory distress syndrome
    A B Adams
    Pulmonary Research Laboratory, Regions Hospital, St Paul, Minnesota 55101 2595, USA
    Respir Care 46:686-93. 2001
    ..Dynamic pressure-volume (DPV) curves obtained during tidal ventilation are effortlessly displayed on modern mechanical ventilator monitors and bear a theoretical but unproven relationship to the more labor-intensive SPV curves...
  31. ncbi Pro/con clinical debate: the use of prone positioning in the management of patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    University of Minnesota, USA
    Crit Care 6:15-7. 2002
  32. ncbi Distal projection of insufflated gas during tracheal gas insufflation
    Christopher S Carter
    Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN 55101, USA
    J Appl Physiol 92:1843-50. 2002
    ..We conclude that forward-directed TGI penetrates a substantial distance into the central airways, extending the compartment susceptible to CO2 washout...
  33. ncbi A proposed curvilinearity index for quantifying airflow obstruction
    Chang Jiang Zheng
    Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Regions Hospital, 640 Jackson Street, St Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Respir Care 51:40-5. 2006
    ..Currently there is no available index to quantify a pathological contour of curvilinearity...
  34. ncbi Ventilation of patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    Yin Peigang
    Pulmonary Department, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, Minnesota 55101, USA
    Curr Opin Crit Care 8:70-6. 2002
    ..When feasible, noninvasive ventilation often facilitates the weaning of ventilator-dependent patients with COPD and shortens the patient's stay in the intensive care unit...
  35. ncbi High dose insulin in toxic cardiogenic shock
    Joel S Holger
    Department of Emergency Medicine, Regions Hospital, St Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Clin Toxicol (Phila) 47:303-7. 2009
    ..To report the successful use of high dose insulin (HDI) in previously unreported insulin dosing ranges in a patient with severe myocardial toxicity due to an amitriptyline and citalopram overdose...
  36. ncbi Safer ventilation of the injured lung: one step closer
    John J Marini
    Regions Hospital MS 11203B, University of Minnesota, 640 Jackson Street, St Paul, MN 55101 2595, USA
    Crit Care 14:192. 2010
    ..Quantitative bedside imaging techniques that are sensitive to regional mechanics and tidal events hold potential for information delivery that cannot be realized by pressure-volume monitoring alone...
  37. ncbi Microvasculature in ventilator-induced lung injury: target or cause?
    J J Marini
    University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN 55101, USA
    Minerva Anestesiol 70:167-73. 2004
    ..Raising ventilation frequency may also have cost. Such observations imply that reducing the demands for blood flow and ventilation are important considerations in formulating a lung protective approach to mechanical ventilation of ARDS...
  38. ncbi How to recruit the injured lung
    J J Marini
    Professor of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55101, USA
    Minerva Anestesiol 69:193-200. 2003
    ..In conclusion, The "Open lung" approach should not be applied to every patient; it should be reserved to restore lung volume if deterioration occurs, by means of adequate PEEP level and lowest acceptable FiO(2)...
  39. ncbi Effects of mean airway pressure and tidal excursion on lung injury induced by mechanical ventilation in an isolated perfused rabbit lung model
    A F Broccard
    Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA
    Crit Care Med 27:1533-41. 1999
    ..To study the relative contributions of mean airway pressure (mPaw) and tidal excursion (V(T)) to ventilator-induced lung injury under constant perfusion conditions...
  40. ncbi Relative roles of vascular and airspace pressures in ventilator-induced lung injury
    J R Hotchkiss
    Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Regions Hospital, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA
    Crit Care Med 29:1593-8. 2001
    ....
  41. ncbi Lung stress and strain during mechanical ventilation for acute respiratory distress syndrome
    Davide Chiumello
    Dipartimento di Anestesia, Rianimazione, Intensiva e Subintensivae, Terapia del Dolore, Fondazione IRCCS, Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico Mangiagalli Regina Elena di Milano, Milan, Italy
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 178:346-55. 2008
    ..Lung injury caused by a ventilator results from nonphysiologic lung stress (transpulmonary pressure) and strain (inflated volume to functional residual capacity ratio)...
  42. ncbi Monitoring the mechanically ventilated patient
    Vasileios Bekos
    Department of Intensive Care, Naval Hospital of Athens, 229 Messogion Avenue, 15561 Cholargos, Athens, Greece
    Crit Care Clin 23:575-611. 2007
    ..We concentrate on those modalities and variables that are routinely available or easily calculated from data readily collected at the bedside...
  43. ncbi Lung protection in acute respiratory distress syndrome: the neglected vascular side
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 35:1796-7. 2007
  44. ncbi Effect of core body temperature on ventilator-induced lung injury
    So Suzuki
    Department of Traumatology, University of Tokyo, Japan
    Crit Care Med 32:144-9. 2004
    ..Similar results from both the in vivo and isolated, perfused lung studies suggest that the observed effects were not due to cardiovascular factors or consequences of heating nonpulmonary organs...
  45. ncbi Effects of ventilatory pattern on experimental lung injury caused by high airway pressure
    Dana A Simonson
    Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Regions Hospital/HealthPartners and University of Minnesota Medical School, USA
    Crit Care Med 32:781-6. 2004
    ..CONCLUSIONS: In this preclinical model, lung injury was attenuated by decreasing inspiratory time. As lung injury occurred, tidal volume increased and airway pressure waveform changed...
  46. ncbi Mechanical ventilation in sepsis-induced acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome: an evidence-based review
    Jonathan E Sevransky
    Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
    Crit Care Med 32:S548-53. 2004
    ..Weaning protocols should be in place that include spontaneous breathing trials and criteria for initiating such trials. The role of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation and airway pressure release ventilation in ARDS is uncertain...
  47. ncbi Lessons learned: the conditional importance of high positive end-expiratory pressure in acute respiratory distress syndrome
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 34:1540-2. 2006
  48. ncbi Relative importance of stretch and shear in ventilator-induced lung injury
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 32:302-4. 2004
  49. ncbi The "open lung" compromise
    John J Marini
    Intensive Care Med 33:1114-6. 2007
  50. ncbi Breathing patterns as integrative weaning predictors: Variations on a theme
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 34:2241-3. 2006
  51. ncbi Surviving Sepsis Campaign: international guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008
    R Phillip Dellinger
    Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA
    Crit Care Med 36:296-327. 2008
    ..To provide an update to the original Surviving Sepsis Campaign clinical management guidelines, "Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock," published in 2004...
  52. ncbi Auto-peep with low tidal volume
    John J Marini
    Am J Respir Crit Care Med 167:1150-1; author reply 1151. 2003
  53. ncbi Efficacy of lung recruiting maneuvers: it's all relative
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 31:641-2. 2003
  54. ncbi Early phase of lung-protective ventilation: a place for paralytics?
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 34:2851-3. 2006
  55. ncbi Randomized, controlled trials in critical care: an expert interview with John J. Marini, MD [interviewed by Antonios Liolios, MD]
    John J Marini
    MedGenMed 5:26. 2003
  56. ncbi The deceptive complexity of "simple" proning
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 32:2156-7. 2004
  57. ncbi Optimized positive end-expiratory pressure--an elusive target
    David J Dries
    Crit Care Med 30:1159-60. 2002
  58. ncbi Auto-positive end-expiratory pressure and flow limitation in adult respiratory distress syndrome--intrinsically different?
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 30:2140-1. 2002
  59. ncbi Positive end-expiratory pressure in severe airflow obstruction: more than a "one-trick pony"?
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 33:1652-3. 2005
  60. ncbi Are recruiting maneuvers needed when ventilating acute respiratory distress syndrome?
    John J Marini
    Crit Care Med 31:2701-3. 2003