Results 341 to 350 of about 302,055 (364)
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Predictors of Intubation in Patients With Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure Treated With a Noninvasive Oxygenation Strategy*

Critical Care Medicine, 2017
Objectives: In patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, noninvasive ventilation and high-flow nasal cannula oxygen are alternative strategies to conventional oxygen therapy.
J. Frat   +20 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Complications of Intubation

Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 1982
Endotracheal intubation with current inert low-pressure, high-volume cuffed tubes is a safe procedure associated with few complications in the vast majority of patients. However, complications related to mechanical difficulties and mucosal injury can occur even under ideal circumstances.
Lee D. Rowe   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

How to intubate

British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2005
Modern endotracheal anaesthesia and intubation was developed by Magill and Rowbottom after the First World War. Since then tracheal intubation has become an essential part of airway management in elective and emergency acute medicine.
Homewood J, de Beer Jm
openaire   +3 more sources

Aids to Intubation

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

Fibreoptic intubation

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   +3 more sources

To intubate or not intubate, that is still the question!

European Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2020
Frédéric Lapostolle   +1 more
openaire   +3 more sources

To intubate or not to intubate, is that the question?

Pediatric Research
Ola Didrik, Saugstad   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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