photo of

Details

Role Group Leader/Principal Research Fellow
Research area Clinical sciences

Contact

Available for student supervision
David is a clinical neonatologist and respiratory physiologist at the Melbourne Children’s Campus (Australia) whose work aims at improving the respiratory outcomes of newborn infants. David currently leads the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute Neonatal Research Program. This is an interconnected program of molecular and clinical science aiming to better understand lung injury and develop new neonatal critical care respiratory support strategies. His research has explored methods of optimising the volume state of the lung with end-expiratory pressure and supporting the respiratory transition at birth with the use of PEEP and dynamic tidal inflations. Recently he has developed a new method to image the human lung at birth and map the evolution of preterm lung injury using proteomics.

David is a member of projects to develop guidelines on neonatal ARDS, chest imaging and Paediatric COVID-19 therapies, and lead investigator of the international POLAR Trial of PEEP strategies to support the preterm lung at birth. David is the Chair of Respiratory Failure Section of the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care, Commission for the Lancet Commission on the Future of Neonatology and Deputy Co-Chair, Paediatric Panel of the Australian COVID-19 Clinical Evidence Taskforce.
David is a clinical neonatologist and respiratory physiologist at the Melbourne Children’s Campus (Australia) whose work aims at improving the respiratory outcomes of newborn infants. David currently leads the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute...
David is a clinical neonatologist and respiratory physiologist at the Melbourne Children’s Campus (Australia) whose work aims at improving the respiratory outcomes of newborn infants. David currently leads the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute Neonatal Research Program. This is an interconnected program of molecular and clinical science aiming to better understand lung injury and develop new neonatal critical care respiratory support strategies. His research has explored methods of optimising the volume state of the lung with end-expiratory pressure and supporting the respiratory transition at birth with the use of PEEP and dynamic tidal inflations. Recently he has developed a new method to image the human lung at birth and map the evolution of preterm lung injury using proteomics.

David is a member of projects to develop guidelines on neonatal ARDS, chest imaging and Paediatric COVID-19 therapies, and lead investigator of the international POLAR Trial of PEEP strategies to support the preterm lung at birth. David is the Chair of Respiratory Failure Section of the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care, Commission for the Lancet Commission on the Future of Neonatology and Deputy Co-Chair, Paediatric Panel of the Australian COVID-19 Clinical Evidence Taskforce.

Top Publications

  • Tingay, DG, Copnell, B, Grant, CA, Dargaville, PA, Dunster, KR, Schibler, A. The effect of endotracheal suction on regional tidal ventilation and end-expiratory lung volume. Intensive Care Medicine 36(5) : 888 -896 2010
    view publication
  • Pellicano, A, Tingay, DG, Mills, JF, Fasulakis, S, Morley, CJ, Dargaville, PA. Comparison of four methods of lung volume recruitment during high frequency oscillatory ventilation. Intensive Care Medicine 35(11) : 1990 2009
    view publication
  • Copnell, B, Dargaville, PA, Ryan, EM, Kiraly, NJ, Chin, LOF, Mills, JF, Tingay, DG. The Effect of Suction Method, Catheter Size, and Suction Pressure on Lung Volume Changes During Endotracheal Suction in Piglets. Pediatric Research 66(4) : 405 -410 2009
    view publication
  • Kiraly, NJ, Tingay, DG, Mills, JF, Morley, CJ, Dargaville, PA, Copnell, B. The Effects of Closed Endotracheal Suction on Ventilation During Conventional and High-Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation. Pediatric Research 66(4) : 400 -404 2009
    view publication
  • Copnell, B, Tingay, DG, Mills, JF, Dargaville, PA. Endotracheal suction techniques that effectively remove secretions do not preserve lung volume. Australian Critical Care 22(1) : 61 2009
    view publication

Page 27 of 30