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Showing 487 pages, articles and journal scans about ""
Journal Scan
July 2005
Blood gases and pulmonary embolus
Pulmonary embolus (PE) results in a mismatch between alveolar
perfusion and ventilation, with potential for development of
hypoxemia (reduced pO2) and hypocapnia (reduced
pCO2), so that arterial blood gases (ABG) are
frequently ordered for patients either suffering or suspected of
suffering PE.
Is it possible to make ...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
July 2005
The perils of flying
During air travel more than a half of all passengers suffer a
degree of hypoxemia that might trigger prescription of supplemental
oxygen therapy if it occurred in hospitalized patients. That is the
finding of a recent study which sought to establish the effect that
air travel has on measured oxygen saturation.
When...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
July 2005
Population study of ctHb: challenging WHO definition of anemia
Anemia is the collection of signs and symptoms of reduced oxygen
delivery to tissues as a result of a reduction in the number of red
cells and/or reduction in blood concentration of hemoglobin. In
clinical practice, anemia is diagnosed if the blood concentration
of hemoglobin (ctHb) is abnormally low.
The World...
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
July 2005
Back to school
If the results of a "‘small snapshot survey" are representative,
then there is a need for continued education of UK medical staff in
the interpretation of arterial blood gas (ABG) results. Sixty-six
medical staff of all grades and from a range of disciplines, all
working at one hospital, were asked to complete a...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
July 2005
Benign anesthetists
We are all wary to a greater or lesser extent of the doctor
advancing with needle and syringe. Arterial puncture required for
blood gas analysis is a particularly painful procedure, certainly
more painful than venipuncture.
Many studies have demonstrated that
administration of local anesthesia is effective in...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Article
June 2005
Arterial blood collection - part 1 of 2
The collection of arterial specimens with glass syringes
and immediate storage in iced water was the accepted industry
standard for many years. Practice has changed over the past several
years to blood gas sample collection in plastic syringes, likely
due to the cost, safety and convenience of plastic.
This change
...
Quality assurance
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins
Article
June 2005
Reducing sharps injury risk in intensive care
Five years of data on percutaneous injuries (PIs) from the EPINet multi-hospital sharps injury database at the University of Virginia were analyzed to understand exposure risks faced by personnel in intensive care/critical care settings.
Of 687 PIs in intensive care units (ICUs), nurses had the highest proportion of...
Quality assurance
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Article
May 2005
Patient safety: Find the error behind the error
Lately, everybody seems to be talking about reducing
testing errors and improving patient safety. But where do you
begin?
The answer may be to look beyond the error itself and
instead focus on what is causing it. Michael Astion, Associate
Professor, Director of the University of Washington’s Reference
Laboratory...
Information management
Point-of-care testing
Process optimization
Article
April 2005
Management of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia
Supported by Pennsylvania Hospital Kernicterus Fund and the Eglin Fund
In the late 1980s, the question whether bilirubin damaged the brain of healthy infants was unanswered. The absence of documented evidence influenced the formulation of the 1994 consensus-based guidelines...
Neonatology
Bilirubin
Article
April 2005
Behind the glucose protocol
In 2001, Belgian professor Greet Van den Berghe, PhD, and her colleagues at the Leuven University Hospital began a small revolution with the publication of the 2001 study “Intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients”.
According to the study, tighter glucose control based on insulin therapy lowered rates of...
Glucose
Point-of-care testing