Results 291 to 300 of about 116,131 (350)
THE PREVENTIVE EFFECTS OF THE PERCEIVED RISK OF ARREST: TESTING AN EXPANDED CONCEPTION OF DETERRENCE
Daniel S Nagin, Raymond Paternoster
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PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF CARDIAC ARREST
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1954There is nothing more catastrophic from the standpoint of the family, the surgeon, the anesthetist, and all other persons involved than a sudden unexpected death in the operating room. This is especially true if the patient is a healthy person who is undergoing some relatively minor elective operative procedure.
J, JOHNSON, C K, KIRBY
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PREVENTION OF CARDIAC ARREST DURING SURGERY
Survey of Anesthesiology, 1964SUMMARY Cardiac arrest during surgery is increasing in the United States and, therefore, all possible measures to avoid this catastrophe must be provided. Cardiac arrest is not a completely unheralded event, but is preceded by definite prodromal signs. Conventional methods of monitoring are often inadequate in detecting these prodromal changes.
M S, MAZEL +4 more
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Inflammatory resorption: untreated, arrested, prevented
Dental Traumatology, 1989Abstract Three human replantation cases are presented wherein the results are in accord with the literature concerning inflammatory resorption and calcium hydroxide therapy. The cases unintentionally simulate a designed experiment wherein the control case received no treatment and the other 2 were subjected to independent variables such as obturation ...
N A, Remeikis, W F, Stroner
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NO ARREST NEEDED TO PREVENT CARDIAC ARREST
Journal of Experimental Biology, 2005![Figure][1] Most vertebrates die within a few minutes when deprived of molecular oxygen (anoxia) because the heart and brain depend on a continuous supply of oxygen. However, some cold-blooded vertebrates are remarkably anoxia-tolerant and can survive for months without oxygen.
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Preventing and arresting coronary atherosclerosis
American Heart Journal, 1995The good news about coronary atherosclerosis is that it takes an awful lot of plaque before symptoms of myocardial ischemia occur. The bad news is that despite the need for large quantities of plaque for symptoms to occur, nevertheless nearly half of us in the United States eventually have the necessary quantity.
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Education for cardiac arrest – Treatment or prevention?
Resuscitation, 2015In-hospital cardiac arrests (IHCA) occur infrequently and individual staff members working on general wards may only rarely encounter one. Mortality following IHCA is high and the evidence for the benefits of many advanced life support (ALS) interventions is scarce.
Gary B. Smith +4 more
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Benchmarking is key to prevention of cardiac arrest
Nursing Standard, 2010The automatic triggering of a critical incident review for all unexpected cardiac arrests, as proposed by the National Patient Safety Agency (news August 25), should enable organisations to identify readily the remedial factors that may contribute towards a 'failure to rescue'.
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Preventing arrests in the intensive care unit
Journal of Medical Ethics, 2013You have not opened the wrong journal! The police have a duty to protect the public and to investigate any, and all, serious crimes. The article by Lynoe and Leijonhufvud raises important issues about the interaction between hospital staff and police in cases in which suggested medical negligence crosses into the arena of serious legal offences, which
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Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Pathways and Tools
Critical Pathways in Cardiology: A Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine, 2009Evidence-based consensus treatment guidelines are available to assist physicians with management of patients at risk for sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), including patients with heart failure and those after myocardial infarction with left ventricular dysfunction. Although it has been generally presumed that health care providers incorporate cardiovascular
Gregg C, Fonarow +5 more
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