Charles Terry, M.D., MSCR, Research Profile

TerryCharles Terry, M.D., MSCR

Assistant Professor
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Allergy, and Sleep Medicine

Research Type: Clinical


Charles Terry, M.D., MSCR, is an Assistant Professor of Medicine. His research interests involve developing pragmatic methods for identifying and studying sub-phenotypes of critical illness syndromes using readily available clinical data. His current research uses machine learning and natural language processing to identify acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and sub-phenotypes of acute ventilator-dependent respiratory syndrome (VDRF). He is a member of MUSC’s federal Telehealth Center of Excellence where he has curated the educational content for several training modules for basic and advanced management of ARDS and sepsis. His research is supported by internal awards from the South Carolina Translational Research Institute and extramural awards.

Clinically, Dr. Terry has been instrumental in starting MUSC’s extracorporeal liver support program for acute liver failure, which has bridged many of the sickest South Carolinians to transplant or recovery. He teaches and trains the next generation of intensivists in the division’s pulmonary/critical care and critical care fellowship programs and serves as the director of the Acute Care and Trauma Integrated Center of Clinical Excellence’s interdisciplinary Critical Care Grand Rounds.

Dr. Terry received his Bachelor of Science in Biology from the Georgia Institute of Technology and his M.D. from Vanderbilt University. He completed his internal medicine residency and pulmonary and critical care fellowship training at Emory University, where he also completed a T32-sponsored research fellowship culminating in a Master’s of Science in Clinical Research He joined the faculty at MUSC in 2021.

Publications

NCBI Bibliography