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Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy During Liver Transplant: The Anesthesiologist-Nephrologist Collaboration at a Tertiary University Hospital in Italy. [PDF]
Laici C +5 more
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Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Catalysis of Glucose to Lactic Acid and Lactates: A Review
Thomas Saulnier-Bellemare +1 more
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Clinical Approach to Acute Recreational Drug Intoxication in the Emergency Setting: A Practical Guide Based on Swiss Experience. [PDF]
Bless P +5 more
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The Importance of Predicting Bowel Necrosis in Acute Mesenteric Ischemia: Narrative Review. [PDF]
Giannessi C +8 more
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Practical Neurology, 2020
Lactate is produced from anaerobic glycolysis, which occurs in most tissues in the human body. Blood lactate is tested in most physiologically unwell patients in the Emergency Department and helps to guide treatment and prognosis. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate, however, is not often measured.
Aravindhan Baheerathan +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Lactate is produced from anaerobic glycolysis, which occurs in most tissues in the human body. Blood lactate is tested in most physiologically unwell patients in the Emergency Department and helps to guide treatment and prognosis. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate, however, is not often measured.
Aravindhan Baheerathan +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Critical Care Clinics, 1987
Lactate is the end product of the anaerobic metabolism of glucose, and its accumulation in the blood signals an increase in production or a decrease in utilization, or both. The most common etiology of lactic acidosis is hypoperfusion, which represents an imbalance between systemic oxygen demand and oxygen availability with resultant tissue hypoxia.
J A, Kruse, R W, Carlson
openaire +2 more sources
Lactate is the end product of the anaerobic metabolism of glucose, and its accumulation in the blood signals an increase in production or a decrease in utilization, or both. The most common etiology of lactic acidosis is hypoperfusion, which represents an imbalance between systemic oxygen demand and oxygen availability with resultant tissue hypoxia.
J A, Kruse, R W, Carlson
openaire +2 more sources

