New anesthetic agents, devices, and monitoring techniques : annual Utah postgraduate course in anesthesiology, 1983

Bibliographic Information

New anesthetic agents, devices, and monitoring techniques : annual Utah postgraduate course in anesthesiology, 1983

edited by Theodore H. Stanley, W. Clayton Petty

(Developments in critical care medicine and anaesthesiology, 3)

M. Nijhoff Publishers , Distributors for the U.S. and Canada, Kluwer Boston, 1983

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Table of Contents

1. Current concepts in cerebral resuscitation/protection.- 2. Management of electrolyte abnormalities.- 3. Anesthetic management of the high risk pregnant patient: preeclampsia and diabetes.- 4. Anesthesia for cerebral vascular surgery.- 5. Management of anesthesia in the presence of liver disease.- 6. Special techniques in neuroanesthesia.- 7. Changing concepts in preanesthetic medication.- 8. Calcium channel blockers and anesthesia.- 9. Comparisons between beta blockers and calcium entry blockers.- 10. Aspiration in obstetrics: etiology, prevention and treatment.- 11. New developments in vasodilator therapy.- 12. Electrostimulation as an adjunct to anesthesia.- 13. New muscle relaxants.- 14. New intravenous anesthetic drugs: etomidate and midazolam.- 15. The new opioids.- 16. Comparative pharmacology of volatile anesthetics.- 17. Prevention and treatment of intraoperative myocardial ischemia.- 18. Toxicity of local anesthetics in the adult, fetus and newborn.- 19. Anesthesia for cesarean section: regional and general.- 20. New aspects of nondepolarizing relaxant reversal.- 21. Buying a monitor.- 22. When are pulmonary artery catheters indicated in noncardiac surgery?.- 23. Monitoring the EEG in the operating room.- 24. Biochemical and biophysical monitoring of the fetus.- 25. Are inhalation anesthetics better than injectable anesthetics for coronary artery surgery?.- 26. Continuous infusion of intravenous anesthetics: automated IV anesthesia, a rational method of drug administration.

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