University of California San Francisco

Gregory P. Victorino - 144
Gregory
Victorino
MD

Professor of Surgery
Chief, UCSF-East Bay Surgery Program
Chair, Department of Surgery, Alameda Health System
 

Address

35 Medical Center Way, #001
San Francisco, CA 94143
United States

Email: gregory.victorino@ucs�.e�u
Phone: 510-437-4837
Fax: 510-437-5127

    Biography

    Gregory P. Victorino, M.D. is Professor and Chief of the UCSF East Bay Surgery Program. He is also  Chair of the Department of Surgery for Alameda Health System.

    Victorino, a highly regarded trauma surgeon, and professor of surgery.  Formerly, while the Director of Trauma Services at Highland Hospital, his leadership was crucial to the designation of Highland Hospital, the flagship of Alameda Health System, as a Level 1 Trauma Center serving the East Bay.

    Victorino has deep roots in the community with a strong record of clinical outreach. In 2016, he was named Outstanding Physician of the Year by the Alameda Health System. He is also a dedicated teacher and mentor to UCSF-East Bay general surgery residents, and a respected thought leader. His body of professional work includes more than 80 peer-reviewed publications.

    Victorino completed his undergraduate degree at UC Berkeley in 1986 and earned his MD at the University of Pittsburgh. He returned to the Bay Area in 1991, completing a general surgery residency at UC Davis-East Bay in 1998, followed by a trauma-critical care fellowship at UC Davis. Soon thereafter, he joined the UCSF Department of Surgery as a faculty member.

     

    Videos

    Education

    Institution Degree Dept or School End Date
    University of California Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Champion Training 2018

    Board Certifications

    • American Board of Surgery, Surgery
    • American Board of Surgery, Surgical Critical Care

    Clinical Expertise

    Ischemia-reperfusion

    Microvascular permeability and physiology

    Sepsis

    Shock

    Trauma

    Grants and Funding

    • Post-Injury Dysregulation of Lipid Metabolism | NIH | 2007-08-15 - 2013-07-31 | Role: Principal Investigator

    Research Interests

    • Microvascular permeability and physiology
    • Ischemia-reperfusion
    • Sepsis
    • Shock
    • Trauma

    Publications

    MOST RECENT PUBLICATIONS FROM A TOTAL OF 114
    1. Expedited treatment of lower extremity gunshot wounds.
      Sadjadi J, Cureton EL, Dozier KC, Kwan RO, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    2. Local secretion of urocortin 1 promotes microvascular permeability during lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation.
      Cureton EL, Ereso AQ, Victorino GP, Curran B, Poole DP, Liao M, Harken AH, Bhargava A| | PubMed
    3. Single-contrast computed tomography for the triage of patients with penetrating torso trauma.
      Ramirez RM, Cureton EL, Ereso AQ, Kwan RO, Dozier KC, Sadjadi J, Bullard MK, Liu TH, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    4. Glucagon-like peptide-1 protects mesenteric endothelium from injury during inflammation.
      Dozier KC, Cureton EL, Kwan RO, Curran B, Sadjadi J, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    5. Usability of robotic platforms for remote surgical teleproctoring.
      Ereso AQ, Garcia P, Tseng E, Dua MM, Victorino GP, Guy LT| | PubMed
    6. A different view of lactate in trauma patients: protecting the injured brain.
      Cureton EL, Kwan RO, Dozier KC, Sadjadi J, Pal JD, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    7. Despite the increasing use of nonoperative management of firearm trauma, shotgun injuries still require aggressive operative management.
      Dozier KC, Miranda MA, Kwan RO, Cureton EL, Sadjadi J, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    8. Transfusion, not just injury severity, leads to posttrauma infection: a matched cohort study.
      Sadjadi J, Cureton EL, Twomey P, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    9. Lipoxin a(4) attenuates microvascular fluid leak during inflammation.
      Ereso AQ, Cureton EL, Cripps MW, Sadjadi J, Dua MM, Curran B, Victorino GP| | PubMed
    10. The effect of hypoxia, reoxygenation, ischemia, and reperfusion on hydraulic permeability in rat mesenteric venules.
      Victorino GP, Chong TJ, Cripps MW, Ereso AQ, Cureton E, Curran B, Sadjadi J| | PubMed