Ali A. Naqvi, M.D.
- Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine (Critical Care)
Area of research
- point of care ultrasound, critical care echocardiography, medical education, chronic pain
Phone
Location
- Montefiore Medical Center 111 East 210th Street Bronx, NY 10467
Research Profiles
Professional Interests
Dr. Naqvi completed his undergraduate and medical training at Drexel University in Philadelphia through an accelerated 7-year BS/MD program. Upon graduation, Dr. Naqvi returned to New York where he completed a 3-year residency in Emergency Medicine at Northwell Health. He then joined Montefiore Medical Center to complete a 2-year Critical Care Fellowship after which he stayed on as faculty. Dr. Naqvi currently works as a full-time intensivist splitting his time between neurological ICU, medical ICU, surgical ICU, cardiothoracic ICU as well as the critical care consult service between Moses, Weiler and Wakefield hospital.
Dr. Naqvi currently serves as Associate Program Director of the Montefiore Critical Care Fellowship Program and Neurocritical Care Fellowship Program. He is Director of the Transition to Residency course, Assistant Director of the Integration Course and Director of the Point of Care Ultrasound Education at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Dr. Naqvi also runs the New York City Critical Care Ultrasonography course where over 120 fellows from various institutions participate annually.
Selected Publications
Chand, S., Kapoor S., Naqvi, A., et al. (2021). Long-term follow up of renal and other acute organ failures in survivors of critical illness due to Covid-19. Journal of Intensive Care Medicine. Pubmed-ID: 34918990.
Li, T., Jafari, D., Meyer, C., Voroba, A., Haddad, G., Abecassis, S., Bank, M., Dym, A., Naqvi, A., et al. (2021). Video Laryngoscopy is Associated with Improved First-Pass Intubation Success Compared with Direct Laryngoscopy in Emergency Department Trauma Patients. Journal of the American College of Emergency Medicine Physicians Open, 2e12373. DOI: 10.1002/emp2.12373
Naqvi, A., Kapoor, S., Pradhan, M., & Dicpinigaitis, P. V. (2020). Outcomes of Severe Legionella Pneumonia Requiring Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO). Journal of Critical Care, 61, 103–106. PubMed-ID: 33157304
Detloff, M., Quiros-Molina, D., Javia, A., Daggubati, L., Nehlsen, D., Naqvi, A., et al. (2016). Delayed Exercise is Ineffective at Reversing Aberrant Nociceptive Afferent Plasticity or Neuropathic Pain After Spinal Cord Injury in Rats. Neurorehabil. Neural Repair 30, 685–700. PubMed-ID: 26671215.