Dr. David F Gaieski MD
Emergency Physician
3400 Spruce Street Ground Silver Stein Philadelphia PA, 19104About
Dr. David Gaieski practices Emergency Medicine in Philadelphia, PA. Dr. Gaieski 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. Gaieski examines patients, determines means of testing, diagnoses conditions, and decides the best treatment methods.
Education and Training
Univ of Pa Sch of Med, Philadelphia Pa 1994
Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania 1994
Board Certification
Emergency MedicineAmerican Board of Emergency MedicineABEM
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Images in emergency medicine. Synypnea.
- Serum lactate as a predictor of mortality in emergency department patients with infection: does the lactate level tell the whole story?
- Pushing the body's limits. Medical emergencies associated with endurance athletics.
- Salmonella meningitis in an immunocompetent adult.
- Point-of-care testing at triage decreases time to lactate level in septic patients.
- A 52-year-old man with malaise and a petechial rash.
- Out-of-hospital characteristics and care of patients with severe sepsis: a cohort study.
- History and current trends in sudden cardiac arrest and resuscitation in adults.
- Inter-hospital communications and transport: turning one-way funnels into two-way networks.
- Antibiotics in sepsis: Timing, appropriateness, and (of course) timely recognition of appropriateness.
- Sepsis: the inflammatory foundation of pathophysiology and therapy.
- Genetic ancestry and indigenous heritage in a Native American descendant community in Bermuda.
- The frequency and timing of epileptiform activity on continuous electroencephalogram in comatose post-cardiac arrest syndrome patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia.
- Point-of-care urine albumin:creatinine ratio is associated with outcome in emergency department patients with sepsis: a pilot study.
- Initial emergency department diagnosis and management of adult patients with severe sepsis and septic shock.
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