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You're Wrong, I'm Right / Scher, Corey S. ; Clebone, Anna ; Miller, Sanford M. ; Roccaforte, J. David ; Capan, Levon M.
TÃtulo : You're Wrong, I'm Right : Dueling Authors Reexamine Classic Teachings in Anesthesia Tipo de documento: documento electrónico Autores: Scher, Corey S., ; Clebone, Anna, ; Miller, Sanford M., ; Roccaforte, J. David, ; Capan, Levon M., Mención de edición: 1 ed. Editorial: [s.l.] : Springer Fecha de publicación: 2017 Número de páginas: XXVI, 457 p. 4 ilustraciones, 1 ilustraciones en color. ISBN/ISSN/DL: 978-3-319-43169-7 Nota general: Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos. Idioma : Inglés (eng) Palabras clave: AnestesiologÃa Medicina de Terapia Intensiva Medicina para el dolor Medicina de cuidados intensivos Clasificación: 617.96 Resumen: Este texto cubre las principales controversias y "mitos" en cada una de las principales subespecialidades de la anestesia. Tú estás equivocado, yo tengo razón está diseñado para ser una lectura fácil y atractiva basada en evidencia que ofrece el rápido toma y daca de un debate entre dos expertos en la cima de su juego, capturando su argumento completo, incluyendo expresiones de humor y muestras de temperamento. Cada punto de controversia comienza con un caso real, cuidadosamente seleccionado para resumir el argumento. Luego, un autor argumenta el lado "pro" y otro el "contra". A veces un solo autor puede argumentar ambos lados. Al hacerlo, los autores destacan la evidencia más reciente y nos recuerdan los principios clásicos que han resistido la prueba del tiempo. Al final del debate, los lectores pueden determinar qué argumento utilizarán en su práctica clÃnica y también pueden consultar una sección final de "Consenso" que identifica las "elecciones" de los editores y contribuyentes sobre la mejor práctica en una variedad de Diferentes situaciones. . Nota de contenido: Preface -- Contributors -- Section I: General -- Chapter 1. Should Recent Clinical Trials Change Perioperative Management in Patients with Cardiac Risk Factors? -- Chapter 2. Should Real-Time Ultrasound Guidance Be Routinely Used for Central Venous Catheter Placement? -- Chapter 3. A Patient with Chronic Kidney Disease Is Coming to the Operating Room for an Emergent Procedure, which Intravenous Fluid Do You Plan to Give Her? -- Chapter 4. Just say NO to Nitrous! -- Chapter 5. Closed Loop Anesthesia: Wave of the Future or No Future? -- Chapter 6. Should Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Preventative Ventilation Be Standard in the Adult Operating Room? -- Chapter 7. I Gave Rocuronium 3 Hours Ago, Do I Need to Reverse? -- Chapter 8. How Do You Recognize and Treat Perioperative Anaphylaxis? -- Chapter 9. Is Monitored Anesthesia Care (MAC) Safe for All Cases? -- Chapter 10. Does Electrophysiology Really Have to Reprogram My Patient's Pacemaker Prior to Electroconvulsive Therapy? -- Chapter11. When Can Transesophageal and Trans-Thoracic Echocardiography Be Useful in a Non-Cardiac Case? -- Chapter 12. Should Antifibrinolytics Be Used in Patients Undergoing Total Joint Replacements? -- Chapter 13. Will Operating Rooms Run More Efficiently when Anesthesiologists Get Involved in Their Management? -- Chapter 14. Are Outcomes Better for Trauma Patients Who Are Treated Early with Clotting Factors? -- Chapter 15. Should Cerebral Oximetry Be Employed in Morbidly Obese Patients Undergoing Bariatric Surgery? -- Chapter 16. Is Normal Saline Solution the Best Crystalloid for Intravascular Volume Resuscitation? -- Section II: Cardiac -- Chapter 17. Should Local Anesthesia with Conscious Sedation Be Considered the Standard of Care over General Anesthesia for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement via the Transfemoral Approach? -- Chapter 18. Should Antiplatelet Therapy Be Stopped Preoperatively in a Patient with Coronary Artery Stents? -- Chapter 19. Is Extubating My Cardiac Surgery Patient Postoperatively in the Operating Room a Good Idea? -- Chapter 20. Is a Pulmonary Artery Catheter Needed if You Have Transesophageal Echocardiography in a Routine Coronary Artery Bypass Graft? -- Chapter 21. When Should You Transfuse a Patient Who Is Bleeding After Cardiopulmonary Bypass? -- Chapter 22. Neuraxial Versus General Anesthesia in a Patient with Asymptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis -- Chapter 23. Should High-Risk Cardiac Patients Receive Perioperative Statins? -- Chapter 24. Cardiopulmonary Bypass Cases: To Hemodilute or Not? -- Chapter 25. Are Seizures Really a Problem After the Use of Antifibrinolytics? -- Chapter 26. Is Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac Surgery a Good Idea? -- Chapter 27. Are Surgical and Anesthesia Medical Missions in Developing Countries Helping or Hurting?: The Evolving Fields of Global Anesthesia and Global Surgery -- Section III: Thoracic -- Chapter 28. Can Oxygenation in Single-Lung Thoracic Surgery Be Affected by Inhibition of Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction?.-Chapter 29. Is a Bronchial Blocker Just as Good as a Double-Lumen Tube for Achieving Adequate Lung Isolation? -- Chapter 30. Your Thoracic Epidural Is Not Working: How Do You Provide Analgesia Post-Thoracotomy? -- Section IV: Pediatric -- Chapter 31. Pediatric Upper Respiratory Infection: You Cancelled the Case and Told the Parents to Reschedule, Right? -- Chapter 32. Does a Low Mean Blood Pressure in the Neonate Under Anesthesia Lead to Cognitive Deficits? -- Chapter 33. Does Rapid Sequence Induction Have a Role in Pediatric Anesthesia? -- Chapter 34. Anesthetic Neurotoxicity: Is Anesthesia Toxic to the Developing Brain? Should I Cancel My Baby's Surgery? -- Chapter 35. Should an Anxious Parent Be Allowed to Be Present for the Induction of Anesthesia in Her Child? -- Chapter 36. What Is the Role of Premedication in the Pediatric Patient? -- Chapter 37. Presence of Family Members in the Operating Room: Is This Really Helpful? -- Chapter 38. Is it Appropriate for Complicated Pediatric Surgical Patients to Receive Care Outside of Specialized Pediatric Centers? -- Chapter 39. Are the Transfusion Goals for a Premature Infant the Same as for a Seven-Year-Old? -- Chapter 40. How Should You Get the Autistic Child into the Operating Room when the Mother Objects to Intramuscular Ketamine? -- Chapter 41. Is "Deep" Extubation Preferable in Patients at Risk for Bronchospasm? -- Chapter 42. What Is the Best Approach to a Pediatric Patient with an Unexplained Intraoperative Cardiac Arrest? -- Chapter 43. Malignant Hyperthermia: "It Certainly Is" versus "It Certainly Is Not!" -- Chapter 44. Is There a "Right" Drug to Choose When the Blood Pressure Is Low and More Volume Is Not the Answer in a Pediatric Patient? -- Section V: Obstetric -- Chapter 45. Which Is Safer: a Traditional Epidural or a Combined Spinal-Epidural? -- Chapter 46. When Should a Patient Undergoing Dilation and Evacuation of Products of Gestation Be Intubated? -- Chapter 47. Two Blood Patches Have Failed. Now What? -- Chapter 48. Should a Spinal Be Used for Surgical Anesthesia After a Failed Labor Epidural? -- Chapter 49. Accidental Dural Puncture: Should an Intrathecal Catheter Be Threaded? -- Chapter 50. Should Intraoperative Cell Salvage Be Used During Cesarean Delivery? -- Chapter 51. Should Damage Control or Traditional Resuscitation Be Used for Abnormal Placentation Cases? -- Chapter 52. Managing the Noncompliant HIV-Positive Mother: A Pro/Con Debate -- Section VI: Neuroanesthesia -- Chapter 53. At What Hematocrit Should a Patient Who Is Undergoing Craniotomy for Tumor Be Transfused? -- Chapter 54. Traumatic Brain Injury: Where Do We Stand with Ketamine and Hyperventilation? -- Chapter 55. Is General Anesthesia or Conscious Sedation More Appropriate for Patients Undergoing Endovascular Clot Retrieval for Acute Ischemic Stroke? -- Chapter 56. Tranexamic Acid for Major Spine Surgery -- Chapter 57. Should Major Spine Surgery Patients Be Extubated in the Operating Room? -- Chapter 58. General Anesthesia for Intra-ArterialStroke Treatment (Endovascular Mechanical Thrombectomy): Still Needed or a Thing of the Past? -- Chapter 59. Is it Better to Perform a Craniotomy for Brain Tumor Resection Awake? -- Chapter 60. Nitrous Oxide in Neuroanesthesia: Does it Have a Place? -- Chapter 61. Should We Treat Hypertension Immediately Before Electroconvulsive Therapy? -- Section VII: Transplant -- Chapter 62. Viscoelastic Testing in Liver Transplantation -- Chapter 63. Antifibrinolytics in Liver Transplantation -- Chapter 64. Would You Recommend Accepting a "Donation After Cardiac Death" Liver? -- Chapter 65. Should Only Patients Who Are Medically Optimized Receive a Liver Transplant? -- Chapter 66. Is the Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) Score the Best Way to Evaluate Liver Transplant Patients Preoperatively? -- Chapter 67. A Small Bowel Transplant for a Patient with Scleroderma: Once Again on the Slippery Slope Both Clinically and Ethically -- Section VIII: Critical Care -- Chapter 68. Should Steroids Be Used in Septic Shock? -- Chapter 69. Should Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Be Used for the Early Treatment of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome? -- Chapter 70. What Is the Most Effective Initial Resuscitation for the Septic Shock Patient? -- Chapter 71. Should Patients with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Be Placed in the Prone Position to Improve Ventilation? -- Chapter 72. What Is the Best Strategy for Ventilation in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome? -- Chapter 73. Is a Single Dose of Etomidate for Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) Safe in the Critically Ill Patient? -- Chapter 74. Should Intensive Care Unit Patients Be Deeply Sedated? -- Chapter 75. Is There Any Advantage to Albumin over Crystalloid for Volume Resuscitation? -- Chapter 76. There Is Nothing Dexmedetomidine Does that Cannot Be Done Old School -- Chapter 77. Does Treating Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome Lead to Better Outcomes in Surgical Patients? -- Chapter 78. Should Mechanically Ventilated Intensive Care Unit PatientsReceive Physical Therapy? -- Section IX: Ambulatory -- Chapter 79. Should Persistent Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting Delay Discharge of an Ambulatory Surgery Patient from the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit? -- Chapter 80. Should We Postpone Surgery in Patients with Uncontrolled Preoperative Hypertension? -- Chapter 81. Should the Morbidly Obese Patient Be Allowed to Leave the Day of Surgery? -- Chapter 82.
Should Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) Be Used for the Treatment of Postoperative Pain Following Ambulatory Surgery? -- Chapter 83. Pros and Cons of a Freestanding Ambulatory Surgery Center (ASC) Versus a Hospital-Based Operating Room -- Section X: Acute Pain -- Chapter 84. Can a Regional Anesthetic Affect the Development of Phantom Limb Pain? -- Chapter 85. Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease and Regional Anesthesia/Analgesia: Is Perioperative Neuraxial Analgesia Really Contraindicated? -- Chapter 86. Positional Headache Without a Previous Lumbar Puncture: Would a Blood Patch Be Useful?.-Chapter 87. Single-Dose Epidural Morphine or Patient-Controlled Epidural Analgesia (PCEA) for Post-Cesarean Pain Control? -- Chapter 88. Is Opioid Avoidance Warranted for a Patient with Obstructive Sleep Apnea in the Postoperative Period? -- Section XI: Regional -- Chapter 89. Is Spinal or Epidural Anesthesia Contraindicated in a Patient with Multiple Sclerosis? -- Chapter 90. The Scanner, the Twitcher, or Both: How Best to Perform Peripheral Nerve Blocks? -- Chapter 91. Do We Know the Mechanism of Intravenous Lipid Emulsion (ILE) Therapy for High Blood Levels of Local Anesthetics? -- Chapter 92. Secrets Behind Keeping Your Block Catheter Working -- Chapter 93. Is an Indwelling Neuraxial or Peripheral Nerve Regional Anesthesia Catheter Safe in a Trauma Patient Who Needs Twice Daily Low Molecular Weight Heparin? -- Chapter 94. Awake or Asleep: Can Regional Nerve Blocks.Tipo de medio : Computadora Summary : This text covers the major controversies and "myths" in each of the major anesthesia subspecialties. You're Wrong, I'm Right is designed to be an easy and engaging evidence based read that offers the fast-paced give-and-take of a debate between two experts at the top of their game--capturing their full argument, including expressions of humor and displays of temper. Each point of contention begins with a real case, carefully selected to encapsulate the argument. One author then argues the "pro" side and another the "con." Sometimes a single author may argue both sides. In doing so, the authors highlight the newest evidence and remind us of classic principles that have stood the test of time. At the end of the debate, readers can determine which argument they will use in their clinical practice, and may also consult a final "Consensus" section that identifies the editors' and contributors' "picks" of the one best practice in a range of different situations. . Enlace de acceso : https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] You're Wrong, I'm Right : Dueling Authors Reexamine Classic Teachings in Anesthesia [documento electrónico] / Scher, Corey S., ; Clebone, Anna, ; Miller, Sanford M., ; Roccaforte, J. David, ; Capan, Levon M., . - 1 ed. . - [s.l.] : Springer, 2017 . - XXVI, 457 p. 4 ilustraciones, 1 ilustraciones en color.
ISBN : 978-3-319-43169-7
Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos.
Idioma : Inglés (eng)
Palabras clave: AnestesiologÃa Medicina de Terapia Intensiva Medicina para el dolor Medicina de cuidados intensivos Clasificación: 617.96 Resumen: Este texto cubre las principales controversias y "mitos" en cada una de las principales subespecialidades de la anestesia. Tú estás equivocado, yo tengo razón está diseñado para ser una lectura fácil y atractiva basada en evidencia que ofrece el rápido toma y daca de un debate entre dos expertos en la cima de su juego, capturando su argumento completo, incluyendo expresiones de humor y muestras de temperamento. Cada punto de controversia comienza con un caso real, cuidadosamente seleccionado para resumir el argumento. Luego, un autor argumenta el lado "pro" y otro el "contra". A veces un solo autor puede argumentar ambos lados. Al hacerlo, los autores destacan la evidencia más reciente y nos recuerdan los principios clásicos que han resistido la prueba del tiempo. Al final del debate, los lectores pueden determinar qué argumento utilizarán en su práctica clÃnica y también pueden consultar una sección final de "Consenso" que identifica las "elecciones" de los editores y contribuyentes sobre la mejor práctica en una variedad de Diferentes situaciones. . Nota de contenido: Preface -- Contributors -- Section I: General -- Chapter 1. Should Recent Clinical Trials Change Perioperative Management in Patients with Cardiac Risk Factors? -- Chapter 2. Should Real-Time Ultrasound Guidance Be Routinely Used for Central Venous Catheter Placement? -- Chapter 3. A Patient with Chronic Kidney Disease Is Coming to the Operating Room for an Emergent Procedure, which Intravenous Fluid Do You Plan to Give Her? -- Chapter 4. Just say NO to Nitrous! -- Chapter 5. Closed Loop Anesthesia: Wave of the Future or No Future? -- Chapter 6. Should Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Preventative Ventilation Be Standard in the Adult Operating Room? -- Chapter 7. I Gave Rocuronium 3 Hours Ago, Do I Need to Reverse? -- Chapter 8. How Do You Recognize and Treat Perioperative Anaphylaxis? -- Chapter 9. Is Monitored Anesthesia Care (MAC) Safe for All Cases? -- Chapter 10. Does Electrophysiology Really Have to Reprogram My Patient's Pacemaker Prior to Electroconvulsive Therapy? -- Chapter11. When Can Transesophageal and Trans-Thoracic Echocardiography Be Useful in a Non-Cardiac Case? -- Chapter 12. Should Antifibrinolytics Be Used in Patients Undergoing Total Joint Replacements? -- Chapter 13. Will Operating Rooms Run More Efficiently when Anesthesiologists Get Involved in Their Management? -- Chapter 14. Are Outcomes Better for Trauma Patients Who Are Treated Early with Clotting Factors? -- Chapter 15. Should Cerebral Oximetry Be Employed in Morbidly Obese Patients Undergoing Bariatric Surgery? -- Chapter 16. Is Normal Saline Solution the Best Crystalloid for Intravascular Volume Resuscitation? -- Section II: Cardiac -- Chapter 17. Should Local Anesthesia with Conscious Sedation Be Considered the Standard of Care over General Anesthesia for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement via the Transfemoral Approach? -- Chapter 18. Should Antiplatelet Therapy Be Stopped Preoperatively in a Patient with Coronary Artery Stents? -- Chapter 19. Is Extubating My Cardiac Surgery Patient Postoperatively in the Operating Room a Good Idea? -- Chapter 20. Is a Pulmonary Artery Catheter Needed if You Have Transesophageal Echocardiography in a Routine Coronary Artery Bypass Graft? -- Chapter 21. When Should You Transfuse a Patient Who Is Bleeding After Cardiopulmonary Bypass? -- Chapter 22. Neuraxial Versus General Anesthesia in a Patient with Asymptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis -- Chapter 23. Should High-Risk Cardiac Patients Receive Perioperative Statins? -- Chapter 24. Cardiopulmonary Bypass Cases: To Hemodilute or Not? -- Chapter 25. Are Seizures Really a Problem After the Use of Antifibrinolytics? -- Chapter 26. Is Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac Surgery a Good Idea? -- Chapter 27. Are Surgical and Anesthesia Medical Missions in Developing Countries Helping or Hurting?: The Evolving Fields of Global Anesthesia and Global Surgery -- Section III: Thoracic -- Chapter 28. Can Oxygenation in Single-Lung Thoracic Surgery Be Affected by Inhibition of Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction?.-Chapter 29. Is a Bronchial Blocker Just as Good as a Double-Lumen Tube for Achieving Adequate Lung Isolation? -- Chapter 30. Your Thoracic Epidural Is Not Working: How Do You Provide Analgesia Post-Thoracotomy? -- Section IV: Pediatric -- Chapter 31. Pediatric Upper Respiratory Infection: You Cancelled the Case and Told the Parents to Reschedule, Right? -- Chapter 32. Does a Low Mean Blood Pressure in the Neonate Under Anesthesia Lead to Cognitive Deficits? -- Chapter 33. Does Rapid Sequence Induction Have a Role in Pediatric Anesthesia? -- Chapter 34. Anesthetic Neurotoxicity: Is Anesthesia Toxic to the Developing Brain? Should I Cancel My Baby's Surgery? -- Chapter 35. Should an Anxious Parent Be Allowed to Be Present for the Induction of Anesthesia in Her Child? -- Chapter 36. What Is the Role of Premedication in the Pediatric Patient? -- Chapter 37. Presence of Family Members in the Operating Room: Is This Really Helpful? -- Chapter 38. Is it Appropriate for Complicated Pediatric Surgical Patients to Receive Care Outside of Specialized Pediatric Centers? -- Chapter 39. Are the Transfusion Goals for a Premature Infant the Same as for a Seven-Year-Old? -- Chapter 40. How Should You Get the Autistic Child into the Operating Room when the Mother Objects to Intramuscular Ketamine? -- Chapter 41. Is "Deep" Extubation Preferable in Patients at Risk for Bronchospasm? -- Chapter 42. What Is the Best Approach to a Pediatric Patient with an Unexplained Intraoperative Cardiac Arrest? -- Chapter 43. Malignant Hyperthermia: "It Certainly Is" versus "It Certainly Is Not!" -- Chapter 44. Is There a "Right" Drug to Choose When the Blood Pressure Is Low and More Volume Is Not the Answer in a Pediatric Patient? -- Section V: Obstetric -- Chapter 45. Which Is Safer: a Traditional Epidural or a Combined Spinal-Epidural? -- Chapter 46. When Should a Patient Undergoing Dilation and Evacuation of Products of Gestation Be Intubated? -- Chapter 47. Two Blood Patches Have Failed. Now What? -- Chapter 48. Should a Spinal Be Used for Surgical Anesthesia After a Failed Labor Epidural? -- Chapter 49. Accidental Dural Puncture: Should an Intrathecal Catheter Be Threaded? -- Chapter 50. Should Intraoperative Cell Salvage Be Used During Cesarean Delivery? -- Chapter 51. Should Damage Control or Traditional Resuscitation Be Used for Abnormal Placentation Cases? -- Chapter 52. Managing the Noncompliant HIV-Positive Mother: A Pro/Con Debate -- Section VI: Neuroanesthesia -- Chapter 53. At What Hematocrit Should a Patient Who Is Undergoing Craniotomy for Tumor Be Transfused? -- Chapter 54. Traumatic Brain Injury: Where Do We Stand with Ketamine and Hyperventilation? -- Chapter 55. Is General Anesthesia or Conscious Sedation More Appropriate for Patients Undergoing Endovascular Clot Retrieval for Acute Ischemic Stroke? -- Chapter 56. Tranexamic Acid for Major Spine Surgery -- Chapter 57. Should Major Spine Surgery Patients Be Extubated in the Operating Room? -- Chapter 58. General Anesthesia for Intra-ArterialStroke Treatment (Endovascular Mechanical Thrombectomy): Still Needed or a Thing of the Past? -- Chapter 59. Is it Better to Perform a Craniotomy for Brain Tumor Resection Awake? -- Chapter 60. Nitrous Oxide in Neuroanesthesia: Does it Have a Place? -- Chapter 61. Should We Treat Hypertension Immediately Before Electroconvulsive Therapy? -- Section VII: Transplant -- Chapter 62. Viscoelastic Testing in Liver Transplantation -- Chapter 63. Antifibrinolytics in Liver Transplantation -- Chapter 64. Would You Recommend Accepting a "Donation After Cardiac Death" Liver? -- Chapter 65. Should Only Patients Who Are Medically Optimized Receive a Liver Transplant? -- Chapter 66. Is the Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) Score the Best Way to Evaluate Liver Transplant Patients Preoperatively? -- Chapter 67. A Small Bowel Transplant for a Patient with Scleroderma: Once Again on the Slippery Slope Both Clinically and Ethically -- Section VIII: Critical Care -- Chapter 68. Should Steroids Be Used in Septic Shock? -- Chapter 69. Should Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Be Used for the Early Treatment of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome? -- Chapter 70. What Is the Most Effective Initial Resuscitation for the Septic Shock Patient? -- Chapter 71. Should Patients with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Be Placed in the Prone Position to Improve Ventilation? -- Chapter 72. What Is the Best Strategy for Ventilation in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome? -- Chapter 73. Is a Single Dose of Etomidate for Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) Safe in the Critically Ill Patient? -- Chapter 74. Should Intensive Care Unit Patients Be Deeply Sedated? -- Chapter 75. Is There Any Advantage to Albumin over Crystalloid for Volume Resuscitation? -- Chapter 76. There Is Nothing Dexmedetomidine Does that Cannot Be Done Old School -- Chapter 77. Does Treating Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome Lead to Better Outcomes in Surgical Patients? -- Chapter 78. Should Mechanically Ventilated Intensive Care Unit PatientsReceive Physical Therapy? -- Section IX: Ambulatory -- Chapter 79. Should Persistent Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting Delay Discharge of an Ambulatory Surgery Patient from the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit? -- Chapter 80. Should We Postpone Surgery in Patients with Uncontrolled Preoperative Hypertension? -- Chapter 81. Should the Morbidly Obese Patient Be Allowed to Leave the Day of Surgery? -- Chapter 82.
Should Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) Be Used for the Treatment of Postoperative Pain Following Ambulatory Surgery? -- Chapter 83. Pros and Cons of a Freestanding Ambulatory Surgery Center (ASC) Versus a Hospital-Based Operating Room -- Section X: Acute Pain -- Chapter 84. Can a Regional Anesthetic Affect the Development of Phantom Limb Pain? -- Chapter 85. Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease and Regional Anesthesia/Analgesia: Is Perioperative Neuraxial Analgesia Really Contraindicated? -- Chapter 86. Positional Headache Without a Previous Lumbar Puncture: Would a Blood Patch Be Useful?.-Chapter 87. Single-Dose Epidural Morphine or Patient-Controlled Epidural Analgesia (PCEA) for Post-Cesarean Pain Control? -- Chapter 88. Is Opioid Avoidance Warranted for a Patient with Obstructive Sleep Apnea in the Postoperative Period? -- Section XI: Regional -- Chapter 89. Is Spinal or Epidural Anesthesia Contraindicated in a Patient with Multiple Sclerosis? -- Chapter 90. The Scanner, the Twitcher, or Both: How Best to Perform Peripheral Nerve Blocks? -- Chapter 91. Do We Know the Mechanism of Intravenous Lipid Emulsion (ILE) Therapy for High Blood Levels of Local Anesthetics? -- Chapter 92. Secrets Behind Keeping Your Block Catheter Working -- Chapter 93. Is an Indwelling Neuraxial or Peripheral Nerve Regional Anesthesia Catheter Safe in a Trauma Patient Who Needs Twice Daily Low Molecular Weight Heparin? -- Chapter 94. Awake or Asleep: Can Regional Nerve Blocks.Tipo de medio : Computadora Summary : This text covers the major controversies and "myths" in each of the major anesthesia subspecialties. You're Wrong, I'm Right is designed to be an easy and engaging evidence based read that offers the fast-paced give-and-take of a debate between two experts at the top of their game--capturing their full argument, including expressions of humor and displays of temper. Each point of contention begins with a real case, carefully selected to encapsulate the argument. One author then argues the "pro" side and another the "con." Sometimes a single author may argue both sides. In doing so, the authors highlight the newest evidence and remind us of classic principles that have stood the test of time. At the end of the debate, readers can determine which argument they will use in their clinical practice, and may also consult a final "Consensus" section that identifies the editors' and contributors' "picks" of the one best practice in a range of different situations. . Enlace de acceso : https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...]