Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /

A symposium, "Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients", was held in May 1990 at the Karl-Franzens-Universitat, Landeskrankenhaus Graz, Austria. The purpose of the symposium, organized by the Departments of Anesthesiology and Surgery, was to discuss the current status of permanent pacemaker technology, emerging developments in this field, legal issues, indications and methods for tempor­ ary perioperative pacing, and the potential for pacemaker malfunction and adverse patient-pacemaker interactions in perioperative and other medical settings. It was hoped that participants would come to some consensus concerning recommendations for satisfactory perioperative management of pacemaker patients. This symposium was probably the fIrst occasion ever that brought together representatives of the pacemaker industry, implanting physicians, and physicians responsible for the management of pacemaker patients in perioperative and other hospital settings to discuss these important matters. Certainly, it was recognized by all who attended that there existed at the time little in the way of substantial knowledge of how to best manage pacemaker patients or patients with possible indications for temporary pacing in "unique" hospital settings especially with exposure to electroma­ gnetic and other potential interference, but in the absence of professional persons with direct knowledge of pacemakers and related devices. Much new information was presented and useful ideas exchanged, so that three symposium participants were of the opinion that papers presented at this meeting should be published as a collective work.

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Main Authors: Atlee, J. L. editor., Gombotz, H. editor., Tscheliessnigg, K. H. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1992
Subjects:Medicine., Anesthesiology., Cardiology., Thoracic surgery., Surgical transplantation., Medicine & Public Health., Transplant Surgery., Thoracic Surgery.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76531-5
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record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Medicine.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Thoracic surgery.
Surgical transplantation.
Medicine & Public Health.
Transplant Surgery.
Thoracic Surgery.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Medicine.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Thoracic surgery.
Surgical transplantation.
Medicine & Public Health.
Transplant Surgery.
Thoracic Surgery.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
spellingShingle Medicine.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Thoracic surgery.
Surgical transplantation.
Medicine & Public Health.
Transplant Surgery.
Thoracic Surgery.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Medicine.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Thoracic surgery.
Surgical transplantation.
Medicine & Public Health.
Transplant Surgery.
Thoracic Surgery.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Atlee, J. L. editor.
Gombotz, H. editor.
Tscheliessnigg, K. H. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /
description A symposium, "Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients", was held in May 1990 at the Karl-Franzens-Universitat, Landeskrankenhaus Graz, Austria. The purpose of the symposium, organized by the Departments of Anesthesiology and Surgery, was to discuss the current status of permanent pacemaker technology, emerging developments in this field, legal issues, indications and methods for tempor­ ary perioperative pacing, and the potential for pacemaker malfunction and adverse patient-pacemaker interactions in perioperative and other medical settings. It was hoped that participants would come to some consensus concerning recommendations for satisfactory perioperative management of pacemaker patients. This symposium was probably the fIrst occasion ever that brought together representatives of the pacemaker industry, implanting physicians, and physicians responsible for the management of pacemaker patients in perioperative and other hospital settings to discuss these important matters. Certainly, it was recognized by all who attended that there existed at the time little in the way of substantial knowledge of how to best manage pacemaker patients or patients with possible indications for temporary pacing in "unique" hospital settings especially with exposure to electroma­ gnetic and other potential interference, but in the absence of professional persons with direct knowledge of pacemakers and related devices. Much new information was presented and useful ideas exchanged, so that three symposium participants were of the opinion that papers presented at this meeting should be published as a collective work.
format Texto
topic_facet Medicine.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
Thoracic surgery.
Surgical transplantation.
Medicine & Public Health.
Transplant Surgery.
Thoracic Surgery.
Anesthesiology.
Cardiology.
author Atlee, J. L. editor.
Gombotz, H. editor.
Tscheliessnigg, K. H. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Atlee, J. L. editor.
Gombotz, H. editor.
Tscheliessnigg, K. H. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Atlee, J. L. editor.
title Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /
title_short Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /
title_full Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] /
title_sort perioperative management of pacemaker patients [electronic resource] /
publisher Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
publishDate 1992
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76531-5
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2081392018-07-30T23:38:49ZPerioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients [electronic resource] / Atlee, J. L. editor. Gombotz, H. editor. Tscheliessnigg, K. H. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textBerlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,1992.engA symposium, "Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients", was held in May 1990 at the Karl-Franzens-Universitat, Landeskrankenhaus Graz, Austria. The purpose of the symposium, organized by the Departments of Anesthesiology and Surgery, was to discuss the current status of permanent pacemaker technology, emerging developments in this field, legal issues, indications and methods for tempor­ ary perioperative pacing, and the potential for pacemaker malfunction and adverse patient-pacemaker interactions in perioperative and other medical settings. It was hoped that participants would come to some consensus concerning recommendations for satisfactory perioperative management of pacemaker patients. This symposium was probably the fIrst occasion ever that brought together representatives of the pacemaker industry, implanting physicians, and physicians responsible for the management of pacemaker patients in perioperative and other hospital settings to discuss these important matters. Certainly, it was recognized by all who attended that there existed at the time little in the way of substantial knowledge of how to best manage pacemaker patients or patients with possible indications for temporary pacing in "unique" hospital settings especially with exposure to electroma­ gnetic and other potential interference, but in the absence of professional persons with direct knowledge of pacemakers and related devices. Much new information was presented and useful ideas exchanged, so that three symposium participants were of the opinion that papers presented at this meeting should be published as a collective work.Current Status of Pacemaker Technology -- Saftey Standards for Cardiac Pacemakers -- Prevention of Crosstalk in Dual Chamber Pacemakers -- Modern Pacemakers -- Rate-Responsive Cardiac Pacing -- Pacemakers in Children -- Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillator -- Electromagnetic Interference and Cardiac Pacemakers -- Radiofrequency Transmission and Cardiac Pacemakers -- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Pacemaker Patients -- Radiation Therapy in Cardiac Pacemaker Patients -- Extracorporal Shock Wave Lithotripsy in Pacemaker Patients -- Pacemaker Malfunction: The European Legal Perspective (with Particular Emphasis on Austrian Law) -- Indications for Pacing: The Cardiologist’s Perspective -- Place of Pacing in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation -- Holter Monitoring for Preoperative Assessment of Bradycardic Arrhythmias -- Temporary Perioperative Pacing -- Pacemaker Malfunction in Perioperative Settings -- Guidelines for the Perioperative Management of Pacemaker and Automatic Internal Cardioverter-Defibrillator Patients.A symposium, "Perioperative Management of Pacemaker Patients", was held in May 1990 at the Karl-Franzens-Universitat, Landeskrankenhaus Graz, Austria. The purpose of the symposium, organized by the Departments of Anesthesiology and Surgery, was to discuss the current status of permanent pacemaker technology, emerging developments in this field, legal issues, indications and methods for tempor­ ary perioperative pacing, and the potential for pacemaker malfunction and adverse patient-pacemaker interactions in perioperative and other medical settings. It was hoped that participants would come to some consensus concerning recommendations for satisfactory perioperative management of pacemaker patients. This symposium was probably the fIrst occasion ever that brought together representatives of the pacemaker industry, implanting physicians, and physicians responsible for the management of pacemaker patients in perioperative and other hospital settings to discuss these important matters. Certainly, it was recognized by all who attended that there existed at the time little in the way of substantial knowledge of how to best manage pacemaker patients or patients with possible indications for temporary pacing in "unique" hospital settings especially with exposure to electroma­ gnetic and other potential interference, but in the absence of professional persons with direct knowledge of pacemakers and related devices. Much new information was presented and useful ideas exchanged, so that three symposium participants were of the opinion that papers presented at this meeting should be published as a collective work.Medicine.Anesthesiology.Cardiology.Thoracic surgery.Surgical transplantation.Medicine & Public Health.Transplant Surgery.Thoracic Surgery.Anesthesiology.Cardiology.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76531-5URN:ISBN:9783642765315