Craig Guenther's research while affiliated with University of Alberta and other places
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Publications (4)
Unlabelled:
Dynamic left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (DLVOTO) has been observed in a variety of clinical circumstances but not previously reported in the setting of orthotopic lung transplantation. Diagnosis and effective management of this adverse event were facilitated by transesophageal echocardiography (TEE).
Implications:
Dynamic...
The use of epidural stimulation to confirm epidural catheter placement has been shown. This case report describes the benefits and problems of using the epidural stimulation test to confirm epidural catheter placement and provides supporting evidence for these observations using radiological imaging.
A nerve stimulator was connected to the proxima...
Citations
... 2 Direct observation with criteria, such as checklists and global rating scales, may improve the assessment of technical skill by reducing observer bias. 3 Within anesthesiology, construct validity has been established for a variety of task-specific checklists and global rating scales. 3,4 Checklists measure expertise by separating the technical skill into its smallest component tasks and recording whether the task is completed. ...
... We are aware, as Dr Greenwell mentioned in her editorial, that compared to our colleagues in other branches of medicine, we have a higher mortality in service and higher early retirement on health grounds and that this is greatest in the middle-aged anaesthetist [1]. We also fare poorly in alcohol and opioid drug abuse [2] and it has been suggested that we may be self-selecting for anaesthetics by our personalities and that this may hold a propensity for stress [3]. It would therefore appear that there is a lot more that needs to be done, both in the organisation of anaesthesia and particularly in opportunities for personal development, a theme omitted in the editorial. ...
... The advantage of NS is that it does not expose patients to contrast or radiation and it can be conducted using equipment that is typically already available to anesthesiologists. Despite being described over 20 years ago [9,[15][16][17][18], its use has not been widely adopted. This may be due to the perceived complexity of setting up a circuit with conventional catheters and a saline bridge [18]. ...
... Since then its use has expanded and now has become a standard intraoperative diagnostic tool for the management of patients undergoing cardiac surgery [80] as well as other major surgical procedures like lung transplantation, liver transplantation, and aortocardiac surgical patients where it often provides new and important information about pathology and may guide both surgical and anesthetic therapy. [81,82] TOE is also useful in guiding therapy in hemodynamically unstable patients in the operating room, and in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), as simple TOE view can distinguish the hypotensive patients from the one with primary pump failure. But, no evidence supporting this practice is available. ...