Results 181 to 190 of about 22,848 (218)
Transplacental digoxin treatment for fetal supraventricular arrhythmias: Insights from Chinese fetuses. [PDF]
Wang C +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
Managing Thyrotoxicosis in Acute Heart Failure. [PDF]
Rodriguez-Santiago MA, Mesa-Pabón MA.
europepmc +1 more source
Congenital Absence of the Left Atrial Appendage and Possible Effects on Thrombosis: A Case Report. [PDF]
Kambhampati H +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Defibrillation and Cardioversion
Critical Care Clinics, 1992To optimize the success of defibrillation, the clinician needs to minimize impedance, choose the proper energy level, apply the proper interface, select the appropriate paddle size, and deliver the shock at the earliest possible time. Other factors that may contribute to effective defibrillation include defibrillation during exhalation, maintenance of ...
Herbert J. Rogove, Christopher M. Hughes
openaire +3 more sources
New England Journal of Medicine, 1965
THE conversion of cardiac arrhythmias by directcurrent countershock has become widely accepted but has usually required the use of general anesthesia, with its attendant hazards and practical problems. The last 15 patients undergoing cardioversion in our laboratory have been prepared for electric shock with a single intravenous injection of diazepam ...
D. O. Nutter, R. A. Massumi
openaire +3 more sources
THE conversion of cardiac arrhythmias by directcurrent countershock has become widely accepted but has usually required the use of general anesthesia, with its attendant hazards and practical problems. The last 15 patients undergoing cardioversion in our laboratory have been prepared for electric shock with a single intravenous injection of diazepam ...
D. O. Nutter, R. A. Massumi
openaire +3 more sources
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1971
To the Editor.— In response to the article by Barrett and Hey ( 214: 1323,1970), I find it very difficult to implicate diazepam as the toxic agent producing the ventricular arrhythmias described. In the first case, the patient had a history of "chronic bronchitis" and may well have had hypoxia or respiratory acidosis, or both, which was aggravated by
A P, Naney, W G, Chaffee
openaire +3 more sources
To the Editor.— In response to the article by Barrett and Hey ( 214: 1323,1970), I find it very difficult to implicate diazepam as the toxic agent producing the ventricular arrhythmias described. In the first case, the patient had a history of "chronic bronchitis" and may well have had hypoxia or respiratory acidosis, or both, which was aggravated by
A P, Naney, W G, Chaffee
openaire +3 more sources

