Results 291 to 300 of about 140,658 (348)

INTRAOPERATIVE NEUROPHYSIOLOGIC MONITORIZATION - INITIAL PERSONAL EXPERIENCE WITH 35 PATIENTS

open access: green, 2011
Gustavo Rassier Isolan   +7 more
openalex   +1 more source

Intraoperative cranial nerve monitoring

Muscle & Nerve, 2004
AbstractThe purpose of intraoperative monitoring is to preserve function and prevent injury to the nervous system at a time when clinical examination is not possible. Cranial nerves are delicate structures and are susceptible to damage by mechanical trauma or ischemia during intracranial and extracranial surgery.
openaire   +4 more sources

Intraoperative Nociception Monitoring

Anesthesiology Clinics, 2021
Nociception refers to the process of encoding and processing noxious stimuli. Its monitoring can have potential benefits. Under anesthesia, nociceptive signals are continuously generated to cause involuntary effects on the autonomic nervous system, reflex movement, and stress response. Most available systems depend on the identification and measurement
Harsha, Shanthanna   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Intraoperative Monitoring

Anesthesiology Clinics, 2016
Intraoperative monitoring and testing is conducted to improve neurological outcomes from surgery that incurs risk of neurological injury. Many techniques are familiar from the outpatient neurodiagnostic laboratory, and can be applied with minor modifications to the operating room setting.
Antoun Koht, Tod B. Sloan
openaire   +2 more sources

Intraoperative monitoring

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2017
Chapter 25 introduced some basic generic principles applicable to many measurement and monitoring techniques. Chapter 43 introduces those principles not covered in Chapter 25 and discusses in detail the clinical applications and limitations of the many monitoring techniques available to the modern clinical anaesthetist.
Patrick Magee, Mark Tooley
openaire   +2 more sources

INTRAOPERATIVE MONITORING

Chest Surgery Clinics of North America, 1997
This article discusses some of the routine as well as more specialized monitoring devices available. In thoracic surgery monitoring may be even more challenging because the surgery itself may involve manipulation of the airways, the pulmonary as well as cardiovascular systems.
openaire   +2 more sources

Neurophysiological Intraoperative Monitoring

American Journal of Audiology, 1992
In November 1991, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association formally adopted the position that neurophysiological intraoperative monitoring (NIM) is within the scope of practice of audiology. This article relates to the scope of practice extension in several ways. NIM is defined and described in a manner that presents the comprehensive nature of
openaire   +2 more sources

Intraoperative Monitoring

2013
AbstractIntraoperative examination serves a variety of purposes: it characterizes the nerve injury, elucidates the mechanism and severity of the lesion,warns the surgeons if a tissue considered for dissection contains neural elements, and guides them to take an appropriate course of action.Electrodiagnostic techniques available for this purpose ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Intraoperative Evoked Potential Monitoring

Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 1987
There has been a tremendous growth in the use of evoked potential techniques in the orthopedic and neurosurgical operating rooms. The popularity of evoked potential monitoring has evolved from the surgeon's need to know the impact of surgical manipulations on the central nervous system.
G P, Jacobson, J M, Tew
openaire   +2 more sources

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