CuthbertsonD.P. (1942). Post-shock metabolic response. Lancet, i, 433–437.
2.
EdwardsJ.D.RedmondA.D.NightingaleP., & WilkinsR.G. (1988). Oxygen consumption following trauma: A reappraisal in severely injured patients requiring mechanical ventilation. British Journal of Surgery, 74, 690–692.
3.
GannP.S. (1986). General body response to trauma. In: SchwartzG. R.SafarP.StoneJ.H.StoreyP.B., & WagnerD.K. (Eds.). Principles and practice of emergency medicine (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
4.
GuytonA.C. (1986). Textbook of medical physiology (7th ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
5.
LittleR.A. (1985). Heat production after injury. British Medical Bulletin, 41(3), 226–231.
6.
LittleR.A., & StonerH.B. (1981). Body temperature after accidental injury. British Journal of Surgery, 68, 221–224.
7.
MarzelaL.L., & TrumpB.F. (1987). Cell injury and its meaning in shock and resuscitation. In SiegelJ. H. (Ed.). Trauma: Emergency surgery and critical care. New York: Churchill Livingstone.
8.
MoonB.C.GirottiM.J.WrenS.F., & DawsonR. (1986). PMN superoxide radical production following a metabolic-endocrine simulation of trauma. Annals of Surgery, 203(3), 246–249.
9.
PorthC.M. (1986). Pathophysiology: Concepts of altered health states (2nd ed.). New York: J.B. Lippincott.
10.
RichardsonJ.D.PolkH.C.Jr., & FlintL.M. (1987). Trauma: Clinical care and pathophysiology. Chicago: Year Book Medical Publishers.
SafarP. (1986a). The pathophysiology of dying and reanimation. In: SchwartzG. R.SafarP.StoneJ. H.StoreyP. B., & WagnerD. K. (Eds.). Principles and practice of emergency medicine (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
13.
SafarP. (1986b). Pathophysiology of acute nervous system failure. In: SchwartzG. R.SafarP.StoneJ. H.StoreyP. B., & WagnerD. K. (Eds.). Principles and practice of emergency medicine (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
14.
SafarP., & CarolineN. (1986c). Acute respiratory insufficiency. In: SchwartzG. R.SafarP.StoneJ. H.StoreyP. B., & WagnerD. K. (Eds.). Principles and practice of emergency medicine (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
15.
StonerH.B. (1983). Metabolic response to trauma. In: HughesS. (Ed.). The basis and practice of traumatology. Rockville, MD: Aspen Systems Corporation.
16.
StonerH.B. (1986). A role for the central nervous system in the responses to trauma. In: LittleR. A., & FraynK. N. (Eds.). The scientific basis for the care of the critically ill. Dover, NH: Manchester University Press.
17.
StonerH.B. (1987). Interpretation of the metabolic effects of trauma and sepsis. Journal of Clinical Pathology, 40, 1108–1117.
18.
SturmJ.A.WisnerD.H.OesternH.J.KantC.J.TscherneH., & CreutzigH. (1986). Increased lung capillary permeability after trauma: A prospective clinical study. The Journal of Trauma, 26(5), 409–418.
19.
VenkatachalamM.Z.BernardD.B.DonohoeJ.F., & LevinskyN.G. (1978). Ischemic damage and repair in the rat proximal tubule: Differences among the S1, S2, and S3 segments. Kidney International, 14, 31–49.
20.
ZuidemaG.D.RutherfordR.B., & BallingerW.F. (1985). The management of trauma (4th Ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.