Prix bas
CHF119.20
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 jours ouvrés.
This book offers valuable guidance to neurointensivists, other neurocritical care staff, and those desiring to develop a neurocritical care unit via a thorough discussion of neurological emergencies and neurocritical care unit organization. This comprehensive volume begins with a review of acute neurological emergencies as managed clinically in the neurocritical care unit. Topics include acute cerebrovascular, neurological, and neurosurgical disorders. The unique aspect of this book is its description of the organization of the neurocritical care unit. We focus on how other services in the hospital interact with and assist neurocritical care operations, telemedicine/telestroke, and neurocritical care personnel and their roles. A review of expected outcomes of neurocritical care conditions is also included. Neurointensivists, neurocritical care unit staff leadership, hospital administrators, and those interested in developing a neurocritical care unit will find Neurointensive Care Unit: Clinical Practice and Organization to be an invaluable guide.
Comprehensively covers acute neurological emergencies and expected outcomes Discusses how other services in the hospital interact with and assist neurocritical care operations Reviews neurocritical care unit organization including the roles of neurocritical care unit personnel
Auteur
Sarah E. Nelson, MDAssistant Professor of Neurology and Anesthesiology-Critical Care MedicineJohns Hopkins UniversityBaltimore, MDUSA Paul A. Nyquist, MD, MPHAssociate Professor of Neurology, Anesthesiology-Critical Care Medicine, Medicine, and NeurosurgeryJohns Hopkins UniversityBaltimore, MDUSA
Résumé
"This book accomplishes a major feat in that it strives to deliver a high-quality neurocritical care textbook to a much larger audience than a traditional text would appeal to. ... it will appeal to intensivists and nonintensivists alike." (Mark A. Burbridge, Anesthesia & Analgesia, Vol. 131 (5), November, 2020)
Contenu
Section 1: Review of the Clinical Standards for Acute Neurological Emergencies. Ischemic stroke.- Subarachnoid Hemorrhage.- Intracranial hemorrhage.- Cerebral venous thrombosis.- TBI.- Spinal Cord.- Oncological Emergencies.- Surgical Emergencies.- Status epilepticus.- Infectious Encephalitis and Meningitis.- Autoimmune Encephalitis.- Neuromuscular disorders.- Acute Causes of Encephalopathy.-Section 2: Identified Systems of Care. Triage officer models.- Telemedicine.- Tertiary/specialty care requests.- Operating room.- Emergency department.- Neurology and neurosurgery floors.- Patients with acute neurological emergencies and other primary medical needs from other services.- Neurology.- Neurosurgery.- Neurointerventional services.- Emergency department.- Nursing care.- Continuous EEG monitoring.- Multimodality monitoring.- Ultrasound-TCD and bedside.- Cardiology.- Infection control.- Pharmacy.- Neuroradiology.- Airway management.- Ethical and legal issues.- Patients who recover.- Patient with partial recovery.- Mortality.- Physician billing and RVUs.- Economic impact of physician substitutes.- Economic impact of house staff. <p