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Showing 66 pages, articles and journal scans about ""
Journal Scan
April 2009
pO2 versus SpO2 in premature neonates
Premature neonates frequently have inadequate respiratory function and require oxygen therapy during the weeks after birth. Since they are also exquisitely vulnerable to oxygen toxicity, careful monitoring of oxygen status is an essential component of neonatal intensive care.
Measuring % oxygen saturation by pulse...
Blood gases/acid-base
Neonatology
Journal Scan
April 2009
Is oxygen therapy for myocardial infarction beneficial
The notion that increased oxygen delivery limits ischemic damage to the myocardium during myocardial infarction seems, on the face of it, highly plausible. Perhaps not surprising, then, that for the best part of a century administration of oxygen has been a routine component of medical care for many patients suffering ...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
April 2009
Blood gases on Mount Everest
The lowest ever recorded arterial oxygen tension (pO2) was just one result of a series of remarkable physiological investigations conducted on Mount Everest that included arterial blood gas analysis at an altitude of 8,400 m (27,599 ft) above sea level, just 484 m short of the summit.
At this high altitude the...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
April 2009
Book Review: Arterial Blood Gas Analysis - an easy learning guide
Of all tests performed on patient blood samples, arterial blood gases (ABGs) are conceptually probably the most complex. An understanding of the clinical significance of the measured and derived parameters generated by blood gas machines depends on a basic knowledge of so many topics, including acid-base theory,...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
April 2009
Correcting potassium concentration of hemolyzed samples
Hemolysis, the breakdown of erythrocyte (red-cell) membranes, can occur in vivo as a result of disease, or more commonly in vitro when it is most usually a consequence of poor blood collection or sample handling technique.
Hemolysis is of significance for laboratory staff because it results in the release of...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Article
January 2009
An introduction to reference intervals (1) - some theoretical considerations
The population-based reference interval is the most
widely used tool for interpretation of individual patient
laboratory test results. The clinical value of those results
depend crucially on the reference intervals with which they are
compared, and all efforts directed at ensuring analytically
precise and accurate...
Blood gases/acid-base
Point-of-care testing
Process optimization
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
January 2009
A comprehensive review of neonatal jaundice
All newborn babies have, by comparison with adults, a raised serum concentration of unconjugated (and therefore total) bilirubin, due principally to the transient increase in red cell destruction associated with the move from intrauterine support to physiological independence.
In close to half of all newborns the...
Bilirubin
Neonatology
Journal Scan
January 2009
Correcting metabolic acidosis - is it beneficial? Is it safe?
Metabolic acidosis is the most common disturbance of acid-base balance among the critically ill of all ages, usually due to increased lactate production consequent on inadequate tissue perfusion and/or hypoxemia. The condition is characterized by primary reduction in bicarbonate and pH revealed during arterial blood...
Lactate
Neonatology
Journal Scan
January 2009
Frequency of blood gas analysis among intensive care patients
The factors that influence critical care nursing staff when making the decision to sample blood for arterial blood gas analysis is the subject of a recent UK study. The authors of this study specifically sought to establish if there is an association between patient values for four parameters (FO2(I) , pCO2, pO2 and % ...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
January 2009
Plasma sodium concentration in the critically ill
Over a third of patients admitted to intensive care develop hypernatremia (raised serum sodium concentration) or hyponatremia (reduced plasma sodium concentration) within a few days of admission. Both hypo- and hypernatremia acquired after admission prolong hospital stay and decrease chance of survival.
These are the ...
Electrolytes