Mechanical Ventilation provides students, residents, fellows, and practicing physicians with a clear explanation of essential physiology, terms and acronyms, and ventilator modes and breath types. The handbook describes how mechanical ventilators work and explains clearly and concisely how to write ventilator orders, how to manage patients with many different causes of respiratory failure, how to "wean" patients from the ventilator, and much more. MechanicalVentilation is meant to be carried and used at the bedside and to allow everyone who cares for critically-ill patients to master this essential therapy.…mehr
Mechanical Ventilation provides students, residents, fellows, and practicing physicians with a clear explanation of essential physiology, terms and acronyms, and ventilator modes and breath types. The handbook describes how mechanical ventilators work and explains clearly and concisely how to write ventilator orders, how to manage patients with many different causes of respiratory failure, how to "wean" patients from the ventilator, and much more. MechanicalVentilation is meant to be carried and used at the bedside and to allow everyone who cares for critically-ill patients to master this essential therapy.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Dr. John W. Kreit is professor of medicine and anesthesiology in the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. His career has been devoted to the education of students, residents, and fellows. He is the former director of the fellowship training program in pulmonary and critical care medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and was the recipient of the 2015 Outstanding Educator Award from the American Thoracic Society.
Inhaltsangabe
* Section 1: Essential Physiology * Chapter 1: Respiratory mechanics * Chapter 2: Gas exchange * Chapter 3: Cardiovascular-pulmonary interactions * Section 2: The Mechanical Ventilator * Chapter 4: Instrumentation and terminology * Chapter 5: Ventilator modes and breath types * Chapter 6: Ventilator alarms - causes and evaluation * Section 3: Patient Management * Chapter 7: Respiratory failure and the indications for mechanical ventilation * Chapter 8: How to write ventilator orders * Chapter 9: Physiologic assessment of the mechanically-ventilated patient * Chapter 10: Dynamic hyperinflation and intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure * Chapter 11: Patient-ventilator interactions and asynchrony * Chapter 12: Acute respiratory distress syndrome * Chapter 13: Severe obstructive lung disease * Chapter 14: Right ventricular failure * Chapter 15: Discontinuing mechanical ventilation * Chapter 16: Non-invasive mechanical ventilation