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Neurocritical Care 2nd Revised edition [Minkštas viršelis]

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(, Professor of Neurology, C), , (, Professor of Neurology, College of Medicine; Chair, Division of Critical Care Neurology; Consultant, Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit, Mayo Clinic Campus, Saint Marys Hospital, Rochester, Minnesota, USA),
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 155x234x15 mm, weight: 726 g
  • Serija: What Do I Do Now
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-May-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190602651
  • ISBN-13: 9780190602659
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 155x234x15 mm, weight: 726 g
  • Serija: What Do I Do Now
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-May-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190602651
  • ISBN-13: 9780190602659
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Patients in the neurointensive care unit pose many clinical challenges for the attending physician. Even experienced clinicians occasionally arrive at the point where diagnostic, work-up, treatment, or prognostic thinking becomes stymied. In daily practice, neurocritical care pertains to managing deteriorating patients, treatment of complications but also end-of-life care assisting families with difficult decisions. Part of the "What Do I Do Now " series,Neurocritical Care provides insight into interventions in acute neurologic disorders. Using a case-based approach, this volume emphasizes how to handle comparatively common clinical problems emergently. New to this edition are cases on monitoring and prognostication. All cases have been carefully revised, and new information, references, and practical tables have been added. Neurocritical Care is both an engaging collection of thought-provoking cases and a self-assessment tool that tests the reader's ability to answer the question, "What do I do now "

Recenzijos

In less than 350 pages, the authors cover central, peripheral, and autonomic nervous system dysfunction occurring in the intensive care unit setting. More than 40 cases are presented, each beginning with a brief clinical presentation... * -The Neurodiagnostic Journal *

SECTION I ACUTE INTERVENTIONS
1 Rapid Progression in Lobar Cerebral Hemorrhage
3(6)
2 Cerebral Hemorrhage and High INR
9(6)
3 Traumatic Brain Injury arriving in the Emergency Department
15(8)
4 Meningitis Not Improving After IV Antibiotics
23(8)
5 Acute Encephalitis and Abnormal MRI
31(10)
6 A Psychotic Break and Seizures
41(8)
7 Acutely Progressive Dyspnea and Limb Weakness
49(6)
8 Infrequent (and Mostly Unfamiliar) Complications After Thrombolysis
55(6)
9 When to Retrieve a Clot in Acute Stroke
61(10)
10 Swollen Ischemic Brain and When to Call the Neurosurgeon
71(6)
11 Cerebral Venous Thrombosis Not Responding to Anticoagulation
77(8)
12 The First Week After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
85(8)
13 More on Delayed Cerebral Ischemia and Neurointervention After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
93(8)
14 Prior Cancer and a Worrisome MRI of the Spine
101(6)
15 Acute Paraplegia After Aortic Surgery
107(6)
16 When Status Epilepticus Does Not Respond to First Treatment
113(8)
17 Urgent Options in Brain Metastasis
121(6)
18 Hemorrhage into a Pituitary Tumor
127(6)
19 Brain Edema and Hypertensive Urgency
133(8)
20 Treatable Toxicity After Chemotherapy
141(8)
21 Waking Slowly and Slurring After Surgery
149(4)
22 Awake and Then Not Awake After Brain Surgery
153
SECTION II MONITORING WITH PROBES 101
23 When a Single EEG Is Not Enough
161(8)
24 When to Place an Intracranial Pressure Monitor
169(8)
SECTION III CALLS, PAGES, AND OTHER ALARMS
25 Wild and Agitated After Acute Abdominal Surgery
177(8)
26 Rigidity After Experimenting with Drugs
185(8)
27 Sweaty, Febrile, and Tachypneic After Traumatic Brain Injury
193(8)
28 Acute Fever and Shock After Ruptured Cerebral Aneurysm
201(8)
29 Rapid-Onset Coma and Chest X-Ray Whiteout After a Fracture
209(8)
30 When Blood Pressure Needs Control After Stroke
217(8)
31 A Common Cardiac Arrhythmia After Stroke
225(6)
32 Hypertension and Bradycardia in Severe Guillain-Barre Syndrome
231(6)
33 Struggling to Get a Patient with Myasthenia Gravis off the Ventilator
237(6)
34 Decreasing Serum Sodium in Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
243(8)
35 Increasing Serum Sodium After Surgery for Tumor in the Pituitary Region
251(10)
SECTION IV LONG-TERM SUPPORT, END-OF-LIFE CARE, AND PALLIATION
36 Goals of Care in a Comatose Teenager
261(6)
37 Goals of Care in an Elderly Person with Catastrophic Brain Injury
267(8)
38 Not Yet Brain Dead
275(6)
39 When to Mention Organ Donation
281(10)
SECTION V PRINCIPLES OF PROGNOSTICATION
40 What Neurologists Know About Outcome in Traumatic Brain Injury and What Other Physicians Want to Know
291(6)
41 What Neurologists Know About Outcome in Post-Resuscitation Coma and What Other Physicians Want to Know
297(8)
Index 305
EELCO F. M. WIJDICKS, MD, PhD, FNCS is a Professor of Neurology, the Chair of Critical Care Neurology, and a consultant in the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit at the Mayo Clinic Campus, Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota.

ALEJANDRO A. RABINSTEIN, MD, FNCS is a Professor of Neurology, in the division of Critical Care Neurology, the Medical Director of the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit, and a Consultant in the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit at the Mayo Clinic Campus, Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota.

SARA E. HOCKER, MD is an Assistant Professor of Neurology in the Division of Critical Care Neurology, the Director of the Neurocritical Care Fellowship Program, and a Consultant in the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit at the Mayo Clinic Campus, Saint Marys Hospital in Rochester, Minnesota.

JENNIFER E. FUGATE, DO is an Assistant Professor of Neurology in the Division of Critical Care Neurology and a Consultant in the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit at the Mayo Clinic