Results 251 to 260 of about 105,924 (291)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
General Anesthesia for Dental Surgery
Postgraduate Medicine, 1952General anesthesia for oral surgery is needlessly dangerous when less than 20 percent oxygen is employed. The technics described, employing safe oxygen concentrations, are universally applicable. The trichlorethylene series is not large enough for definite conclusions.
R P, BERGNER, R M, HERD
openaire +3 more sources
General Anesthesia in Dental Offices
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1986To the Editor.— I wish to make the following comments regarding the CONSENSUS CONFERENCE entitled "Anesthesia and Sedation in the Dental Office."1 The panel of "experts" lacked the real experts in anesthesiology, ie, physician-anesthesiologists who chair major university departments of anesthesiology.
openaire +2 more sources
Dental anesthesia for children
International Journal of Orthodontia and Oral Surgery, 1937Summary The suitable and judicious elimination of pain from minor surgical operations in the mouth of the child is the keystone upon which a highly successful practice may be built. Anesthesia for children may be divided into two groups, general and local.
John H. Gunter +2 more
openaire +1 more source
General Anesthesia for Dental Patients
Anesthesiology, 1946L T, AUSTIN, G O, KRUGER
openaire +2 more sources
A Dental Device for ECT Anesthesia
Psychiatric Services, 1970W L, Barnes, R P, Relyea
openaire +2 more sources

