Veterinary anesthesia medicine and news - Veterinary Medicine
CVC 2009
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Anesthesia
Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Nerve blocks improve general anesthesia (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Administration of analgesic agents into the epidural site has been documented to provide analgesia during anesthesia for surgery in dogs.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Monitoring and management of perioperative problems (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

All commercially available sedatives and anesthetics are safe when properly administered to normal animals.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Anesthesia for sick patients (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Patients that have physiologic or pathologic abnormalities are more likely to develop complications during or after anesthesia and surgery.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Preanesthetic evaluation (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Allen Lakein said "planning is bringing the future into the present so that you can do something about it now".

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

What to monitor and why! The essentials: Cardiovascular, respiratory, and temperature (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

A good anesthetist must have an understanding of normal physiology - as this it is altered by general anesthesia.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Recognize a complication: Prevent an anesthetic crisis (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Effective management of an anesthetic complication is dependent on early recognition of an abnormality and rapid implementation of a treatment plan.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Opioids: Bolus or CRI for anesthesia (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Many of the anesthetic agents commonly used today, including thiopental, propofol, isoflurane, and sevoflurane, have little intrinsic analgesic activity.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Cardiopulmonary monitors: what to use and what does it mean? (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Monitoring the patient adequately is the basis of safe clinical anesthesia.

Source: CVC PROCEEDINGS

Anesthesia for thoracic surgery (Proceedings)

April 1, 2008

Goals of this presentation are to identify physiologic and pathologic abnormalities that require attention in order to provide safe anesthesia in dogs and cats that have, or will be undergoing, penetration of the thoracic cavity.

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