Results 301 to 310 of about 120,744 (362)
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Nitroglycerin Intravenous Infusion

Drug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy, 1982
The treatment of various cardiovascular problems with intravenous nitroglycerin is widely practiced though unapproved. The uses of iv nitroglycerin include improvement of the hemodynamics of left ventricular failure and cardiogenic shock associated with infarction, control of hypertension during coronary artery surgery, and possibly, reduction of acute
G T, Elliott, S L, Quinn
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Intravenous lidocaine infusion

Revista Española de Anestesiología y Reanimación (English Edition), 2018
Systemic lidocaine used in continuous infusion during the peri-operative period has analgesic, anti-hyperalgesic, as well as anti-inflammatory properties. This makes it capable of reducing the use of opioids and inhalational anaesthetics, and the early return of bowel function, and patient hospital stay.
G, Soto, M, Naranjo González, F, Calero
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SEPTICEMIA FROM INTRAVENOUS INFUSIONS

SURVEY OF ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1971
HOSPITAL-acquired infections associated with the use of various types of therapeutic equipment are serious problems that occur almost daily in "modern" general hospitals.
R J, Duma, J F, Warner, H P, Dalton
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Prolonged Intravenous Infusions

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1989
Sir .—We read with interest the article by Shulman et al 1 in the August issue of AJDC and herein report our experience with 45 patients with cystic fibrosis in whom a total of 66 catheters were placed. Patients with cystic fibrosis are similar to patients in the study by Shulman and colleagues in that they also frequently require long-term intravenous
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Intravenous Infusion Filters

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1981
To the Editor.— I would like to add to the discussion between Graybeal and Schmidt (1980;244:332) on intravenous infusion filters. The important issue of the additional cost of routine filtration has been recently addressed by the National Coordinating Committee on Large Volume Parenterals (NCCLVP).
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Intravenous Infusion Filters

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1980
To the Editor.— Schmidt's reply to Dougherty's question about intravenous (IV) infusion filters (242:1790, 1979) was lacking in several respects. His discussion of blood product filters did not relate to IV drug administration, since drugs are not given concurrently with blood products.
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Intravenous infusion drop artifacts

Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1969
Abstract In 11 out of 37 EEG records done on patients receiving i.v. infusions, a curious polyphasic spike-like artifact occurred in one or more electrodes coincident with each falling droplet. These artifacts are thought to be an electrical effect due to a static charge on the contents of the i.v. bottle.
F K, Redding, V, Wandel, C, Nasser
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Continuous rat intravenous infusion

Microsurgery, 1994
AbstractHypovolemic shock and ischemic injury to the graft commonly cause death in small animals after organ transplantation. A venous line must be readily available to replace fluids before fatal complications occur. To establish a venous line, researchers expose a vein by preliminary surgery.
A, Kononov   +3 more
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Slow Infusion Intravenous Cholangiography

Radiology, 1966
A safe and effective intravenous Cholangiographie agent has been available to radiologists since the introduction in Europe of Biligrafin as a 20 per cent solution of sodium iodipamide in 1953 and its successor in this country, the methylglucamine salt Cholografin.2 Through the twelve-year period, 1953 to 1965, clinical investigators using the ...
M I, Feldman, M, Keohane
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Instructions for Intravenous Infusion

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1977
Sir.—While working on a pediatrie infectious disease service some years ago, I spent a significant proportion of my workday restarting intravenous needles that my patients, with remarkable ingenuity and incredible anatomic contortions, had managed to pull out.
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