Results 261 to 270 of about 287,807 (308)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Intubation with an “Airway Intubator”
Prehospital and Disaster Medicine, 1985Airway Intubators are obtainable from Williams Airway Intubator Limited, 405–206 7th Avenue S.W., Calgary T2P0W7 Canada The Airway Intubator serves two purposes: as an oropharyngeal airway and, should the need arise, an endotracheal tube can be passed through the center of the airway intubator into the trachea without the need for further ...
openaire +1 more source
Journal of Perioperative Practice, 2008
Securing the airway is a core skill in anaesthesia, the gold standard of which is tracheal intubation. Normally this is achieved after induction of anaesthesia. However, some circumstances demand an awake approach. Awake intubation can be achieved via several methods.
Kawshala, Peiris, Chris, Frerk
openaire +2 more sources
Securing the airway is a core skill in anaesthesia, the gold standard of which is tracheal intubation. Normally this is achieved after induction of anaesthesia. However, some circumstances demand an awake approach. Awake intubation can be achieved via several methods.
Kawshala, Peiris, Chris, Frerk
openaire +2 more sources
2005
This device was invented by Sir Ivan Magill and Sir Robert Macintosh to visualise the vocal cords to aid intubation. The curved blade of the Macintosh laryngoscope is still popular as the standard and its design has been reshaped in recent years to reduce the biomechanical forces on the teeth [Bucx et al. 1997, Bucx et al. 1994].
Patrick Magee, Mark Tooley
openaire +1 more source
This device was invented by Sir Ivan Magill and Sir Robert Macintosh to visualise the vocal cords to aid intubation. The curved blade of the Macintosh laryngoscope is still popular as the standard and its design has been reshaped in recent years to reduce the biomechanical forces on the teeth [Bucx et al. 1997, Bucx et al. 1994].
Patrick Magee, Mark Tooley
openaire +1 more source
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1988
The advantages of endotracheal intubations are many: patency of airway is reasonably assured, secretions may be removed easily from the tracheobronchial tree, the airway is better protected against aspiration, ventilation can be regulated, and drugs can be administered.
openaire +2 more sources
The advantages of endotracheal intubations are many: patency of airway is reasonably assured, secretions may be removed easily from the tracheobronchial tree, the airway is better protected against aspiration, ventilation can be regulated, and drugs can be administered.
openaire +2 more sources
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1888
Dear Sir: —An editorial appears in the April 13th issue of your valuable journal, on intubation of the larynx, that conveys an impression that, I hope, was not intended. The impression conveyed is, that intubation being a bloodless operation, is readily consented to, and is performed early and often unnecessarily.
openaire +3 more sources
Dear Sir: —An editorial appears in the April 13th issue of your valuable journal, on intubation of the larynx, that conveys an impression that, I hope, was not intended. The impression conveyed is, that intubation being a bloodless operation, is readily consented to, and is performed early and often unnecessarily.
openaire +3 more sources
Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 1994
Although not widely utilized, fibreoptic techniques represent a dramatic advance in the management of the difficult intubation. Particularly suited to the awake patient in the elective setting, fibreoptic intubation can also be useful in selected emergency situations, and can be done under general anaesthesia. In the awake patient fibreoptic intubation
openaire +2 more sources
Although not widely utilized, fibreoptic techniques represent a dramatic advance in the management of the difficult intubation. Particularly suited to the awake patient in the elective setting, fibreoptic intubation can also be useful in selected emergency situations, and can be done under general anaesthesia. In the awake patient fibreoptic intubation
openaire +2 more sources
Bronchofiberoscopy: To Intubate Or Not To Intubate!
Chest, 1973M A, Sackner, J F, Landa
openaire +2 more sources
To Intubate or Not to Intubate—Is That (the Only) Question?*
Critical Care Medicine, 2014Eldar, Søreide, David, Lockey
openaire +2 more sources
To intubate or not intubate, that is still the question!
European Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2020Frédéric, Lapostolle +1 more
openaire +2 more sources

