NCBI Logo
GEO Logo
   NCBI > GEO > Accession DisplayHelp Not logged in | LoginHelp
GEO help: Mouse over screen elements for information.
          Go
Series GSE93101 Query DataSets for GSE93101
Status Public on Dec 31, 2019
Title Molecular Prognosis of Cardiogenic Shock Patients under Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation
Organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary Prognosis for cardiogenic shock patients under ECMO was our study goal. Success defined as survived more than 7 days after ECMO installation and failure died or had multiple organ failure in 7 days. Total 34 cases were enrolled, 17 success and 17 failure.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells collected at ECMO installation were used analyzed.
 
Overall design Analysis of the cardiogenic shock patients at extracorporeal membrane oxygenation treatment by genome-wide expression and methylation. Transcriptomic profiling and DNA methylation between successful and failure groups were analyzed.
This submission represents the transcriptome data.
 
Contributor(s) Hong T, Chen H, Yu S
Citation missing Has this study been published? Please login to update or notify GEO.
Submission date Jan 04, 2017
Last update date Aug 23, 2021
Contact name Sung-Liang Yu
E-mail(s) slyu@ntu.edu.tw
Phone 886-2-23958341
Organization name National Taiwan University
Department Clinical Laboratory Sciences and Medical Biotechnology
Lab Microarray Core Facility
Street address Jen Ai Road Section1
City Taipei
ZIP/Postal code 100
Country Taiwan
 
Platforms (1)
GPL14951 Illumina HumanHT-12 WG-DASL V4.0 R2 expression beadchip
Samples (33)
GSM2443799 ECMO_6
GSM2443800 ECMO_7
GSM2443801 ECMO_8
Relations
BioProject PRJNA360054

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE93101_non-normalized.txt.gz 3.9 Mb (ftp)(http) TXT
Processed data included within Sample table

| NLM | NIH | GEO Help | Disclaimer | Accessibility |
NCBI Home NCBI Search NCBI SiteMap