Harry McKenzie
Surgeon - Cardiothoracic
Contact Information
P.O. Box 148, Salisbury, PA, 15558, United States
Research
Medical data evaluation that is related to the short-term and long-term patient risks and patient benefits of the following:
- Virus infections as a cause of cancer.
- Anesthesia medication preservatives as a cause of reduced efficacy resulting in surgical complications.
- Duration of surgical procedures.
- Length and depth of surgical incisions.
- Blood thinner usage in the event of major trauma.
- Length of stay in the intensive care unit.
- Length of stay in the hospital.
- Accidental gunshot wound prevention and surgical treatment complications.
- Multiple organ-system failure in the intensive care unit.
- Amount of blood flow and level of blood pressure adjustments during use of heart-lung machine.
- Surgical treatment of symptomatic partial and total neck artery blockages.
- Optimal patient-specific approaches to improvement of symptomatic partial and total leg artery blockages.
- Optimal patient-specific approaches to improvement of heart valve disorders with partial or total heart artery blockages.
Additional Education Information
Clinical Medical Education and Basic Medical Science Education:
- School of Medicine - graduate, 1992 (Hahnemann University, Philadelphia, PA)
- Graduate School of Public Health - Public Health Service scholar, 1986-1987 (University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA)
Practice Areas
Cardiac
Thoracic
Vascular
Aorta
Cardiac
Professional Affairs
Critical Care
Thoracic
Endovascular
Esophagus
Vascular
Endocarditis
Mediastinum
Mechanical circulatory assistance
Pleura
Pericardium
Minimally Invasive
Valve disease
Trachea and bronchi
Lung
Electrophysiology/arrhythmia
Chest wall
Heart failure
Cancer
Coronary disease
Great vessels
Ethics
Education
Diaphragm
Organizations
Other Interests
Patient compliance optimization.Procedure simplification and development.Patient treatment outcome improvement methodology.In-hospital patient risk prevention, minimization, and containment.Lengthening highly-complex patient survivorship.Morbidity minimization in the high-risk patient.Multi-therapeutic approach to salvage of highly-complex patients.

