Results 251 to 260 of about 211,114 (306)
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Continuous intravenous regional anesthesia
The Journal of Hand Surgery, 1992This study evaluates the effectiveness of continuous intravenous regional anesthesia for prolonged operations on the upper extremity. The factors evaluated include patient's sex and age, number of procedures performed, tourniquet on and off times, anesthetic doses, adjunctive drugs used, technical complications, and side effects. Seventy-two procedures
L T, Glickman +3 more
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Intravenous Anesthesia: A Warning
Archives of Surgery, 1970IN the minds of the majority of physicians today, intravenous anesthesia means the ultrashort-acting barbiturates, such as thiopental sodium. Many anesthesiologists, however, do not consider these agents as truly anesthetic, since they possess no analgesic potency and act by central depression.
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Intravenous anesthesia for thoracic procedures
Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2008The article reviews the rationale for using intravenous anesthesia for thoracic operations, the drugs and equipment required, and the methodology involved.Recent studies examining whether total intravenous anesthesia offers a physiological advantage over inhalational anesthesia for thoracic surgery remain inconclusive.
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Intravenous Regional Anesthesia
Military Medicine, 1969R F, Rupp, R L, Reid
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Intravenous regional anesthesia
Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association, 1983P S, Schwartz, A, Newman, A L, Green
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Anesthesiology, 1990
Descriptions of the earliest iv injections of various substances by individuals who actually witnessed the experiments in 1656 are presented. Of particular interest is an apparently overlooked account of an experiment in which opium was administered intravenously to a dog many years before 1674 as related by the physician and anatomist Thomas Willis ...
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Descriptions of the earliest iv injections of various substances by individuals who actually witnessed the experiments in 1656 are presented. Of particular interest is an apparently overlooked account of an experiment in which opium was administered intravenously to a dog many years before 1674 as related by the physician and anatomist Thomas Willis ...
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Regional Intravenous Anesthesia
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1965To the Editor:— I believe that your blanket statement in the last sentence, based on the limited bibliography referred to in the article, is invalid. We are continuing to use this form of anesthesia in selected cases and have found nothing, to date, which would indicate any of our earlier published assumptions are wrong (J Bone Joint Surg [Amer]46:811-
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