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Yao & Artusio's Anesthesiology: Problem-Oriented Patient Management
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Blood, as priming solution
Blood-brain barrier
A.2. What is the underlying pathology?
C.4. Why are hypertonic fluids used during a craniotomy?
Blood cardioplegia
Blood conservation, in cardiac surgery
Blood pressure
Blood salvage
in abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
in obstetric patients
perioperative
postoperative
See Glucose levels
A.5. How are the different forms of DM treated?
A.9. What are the clinical features associated with a pheochromocytoma?
B.1. How would you evaluate this patient preoperatively?
B.1. What should be included in your preoperative evaluation? Which preoperative tests would you order?
B.6. How should this patient be premedicated?
See Glucose levels
Blood transfusion
Blood urea nitrogen, in preterm infants
B.2. What are the normal values of arterial blood gases and pH in neonates and infants?
B.3. Interpret the arterial blood gases: pH, 7.30; Paco2, 60 mm Hg; Pao2, 49 mm Hg; HCO3-, 20 mEq/L on 50% oxygen; and 6 cm H2O of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). How would you improve them?
B.4. What are the normal values of arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and respiratory rate for preterm infants?
B.5. What are the normal values of WBC, red blood cells (RBCs), hemoglobin, glucose, electrolytes, calcium, blood urea nitrogen, and creatinine for preterm infants?
B.6. Would you transfuse blood to this patient preoperatively?
Blood vicious cycle
Blood viscosity, in coronary artery bypass grafting
C.II-15. How much pump flow would you maintain during CPB? During hemodilution? During hypothermia?
C.II-16. How does blood viscosity change during hemodilution and hypothermia?
Blood volume
cerebral
decrease, with pheochromocytoma
intracranial
morbid obesity and - A.12. What changes occur in the cardiovascular system of the patient with obesity? Discuss cardiac output, blood volume, blood pressure, and pulmonary arterial pressure.
See Bilateral-lung transplantation (BLT)
A.5. How is the decision made to transplant one or both lungs, and does this influence preoperative management?
A.6. How does a single-lung transplantation (SLT) differ technically from a bilateral-lung transplantation (BLT)?
C.11. Should fluid administration be restricted, and are blood products commonly required?
C.12. Would you extubate the patient upon the conclusion of the procedure?
C.4. What type of endotracheal tube would you use? How would you ventilate this patient?
C.6. How does OLV affect cardiopulmonary function?
D.2. How is postoperative lung ventilation managed, and for how long is it required?
D.4. What are the long-term outcomes of lung transplantation?
Lung Transplantation
See Bilateral-lung transplantation (BLT)
Blunt-tip bougies
Blunt trauma
A.1. How is trauma classified?
cardiac
thoracic
BMI
B-mode echocardiography
BODE index
Body mass index, obstruction dyspnea, and exercise capacity (BODE) index
Body mass index (BMI)
Body temperature
See Obesity
A.2. Define the terms overweight, obesity, morbid obesity (MO), super obesity, super-super obesity, normal weight, ideal body weight (IBW), and lean body weight (LBW). What is the impact of obesity on society?
See Obesity
Bohr equation
Bone scan, in low back pain
See Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS)
C.2. Does this patient require invasive monitoring?
D.1. What are the major complications after lung transplantation?
See Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS)
Bougies, in bariatric surgery
Bowel distention
Bowel dysfunction, opioid-induced
Bowel obstruction
Bowel preparation
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