Results 281 to 290 of about 80,002 (339)
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Hypothermia induced by quetiapine
Postgraduate Medical Journal, 2020An 89-year-old woman was brought to the emergency department, responding only to pain (GCS 6), with a rectal temperature of 28.5°C, hypotension (68/40), bradycardia (35/min) and bradypnoea. The remainder of the examination was unremarkable. She was living at home with her son and a caretaker, confined to bed/wheelchair with a history of Alzheimer’s ...
Ami Schattner, Ina Dubin
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Hypothermia‐Induced Ischemic Tolerance
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1999ABSTRACT:Delayed resistance to ischemic injury can be induced by a variety of conditioning stimuli. This phenomenon, known as delayed ischemic tolerance, is initiated over several hours or a day, and can persist for up to a week or more. The present paper describes recent experiments in which transient hypothermia was used as a conditioning stimulus to
S, Nishio +5 more
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Pancytopenia Induced by Hypothermia
Journal of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, 2002Hypothermia has been demonstrated to induce pancytopenia in animals, but whether this association exists in humans is unknown. The authors report the case of an 8-year-old girl in whom hypothermia (temperature 33 degrees C-35 degrees C) is the cause of pancytopenia.
Louise, Lo +2 more
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Hypothermia-induced neuroprotection
Science Signaling, 2017A reticulon contributes to the neuroprotective effects of hypothermia.
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Southern Medical Journal, 1976
Hypothermia was induced intermittently in a patient to combat hyperpyrexia. The electrocardiogram taken during the hypothermic phase displayed typical abnormalities and consisted of: pronounced sinus bradycardia, marked prolongation of the Q-T interval, muscle tremor artifact, and the characteristic "Osborn wave." Spontaneous rewarming resulted in ...
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Hypothermia was induced intermittently in a patient to combat hyperpyrexia. The electrocardiogram taken during the hypothermic phase displayed typical abnormalities and consisted of: pronounced sinus bradycardia, marked prolongation of the Q-T interval, muscle tremor artifact, and the characteristic "Osborn wave." Spontaneous rewarming resulted in ...
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Clinically Induced Hypothermia
AACN Advanced Critical Care, 2006Clinically induced hypothermia is an evidence-based intervention strategy that can improve the neurological outcome of unconscious patients after sudden cardiac arrest. Until recently, clinically induced hypothermia has been primarily used during surgery as a mechanism of preserving cardiovascular and neurologic stability of patients.
Mary, Holden, Mary Beth Flynn, Makic
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Hypothermia-Induced Coagulopathies in Trauma
Surgical Clinics of North America, 1988Hemorrhage accounts for 90 per cent of deaths after abdominal injury, and half of these deaths are secondary to a recalcitrant coagulopathy. This review concentrates on our present knowledge of the role of hypothermia in trauma-related coagulopathies and notes that preventing as well as treating these disorders remains the focus and the challenge of ...
A, Patt, B L, McCroskey, E E, Moore
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MODIFICATION OF DRUG-INDUCED HYPOTHERMIA
Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1964Male albino rats, acclimated to 23 °C, were exposed to 2 °C and hypothermia was induced by means of reserpine, chlorpromazine, or noradrenaline. Pretreatment with imipramine, iproniazid, pargyline, or l-triiodothyronine of rats receiving reserpine resulted in better maintenance of metabolic rate and body temperature, and decreased mortality compared ...
H F, LETTAU, E A, SELLERS, E, SCHOENBAUM
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