The Oxford Specialist Handbook in Cardiothoracic Critical Care summarises current knowledge and provides an evidence-based approach to all aspects of patient care. It is written by leading experts in the field and provides a guide to clinical decision making in a user-friendly format. Written in the Oxford Handbook format, each section is comprised of short topics ideal for quick reference. Portable, accessible, and reliable, the book equips the clinician with the basic scientific and clinical knowledge to safely assist in formulating management plans, based on current best practice. It is intuitively divided in to four sections, concisely covering; postoperative management, organ dysfunction, specific patient groups and treatments and procedures. This allows confidence in the management of all patients in the cardiothoracic critical care unit, including patients immediately following cardiac surgery, those with acute cardiovascular disorders, those with pre-existing cardiac disease and many others. It will provide knowledge and instil confidence for the procedures regularly performed such as pacing, central venous cannulation and echocardiography.This concise and practical handbook would be useful to the general intensivist and is an indispensable pocket reference for intensive care nurses, advanced critical care practitioners and trainees & consultants in cardiothoracic surgery and critical care. This edition has been updated to cover all recent advances in the management of this critically unwell patient group.
The normal postoperative cardiac patient; Risk Prediction and Outcome; Fast-tracking the low-risk patient; Resuscitation in the cardiac intensive care setting; Myocardial ischaemia and infarction; Bleeding management reexploration; Postoperative Hypotension; Glucose, lactate, and acid–base; Postoperative medications; Information handover and care planning; Left ventricle; Right ventricular failure; Valvular heart disease; Common arrhythmias and their management; Lung; Organ Dysfunction: Kidney; Gastrointestinal; Nervous system; Haematology; Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT) and cardiac surgery; The thoracic patient; The adult patient with congenital heart disease; The obstetric patient with cardiac disease; Heart failure resistant to standard medical therapy; The cardiac transplant patient; The transplant patient – lung transplant; Acute cardiology; Central venous cannulation, pulmonary artery catheter, and minimally invasive cardiac output monitoring; Airway management; Respiratory management; Circulatory support: pharmacological; Circulatory support: mechanical; Epicardial pacing; Sedation and pain relief; Wound management; Infection control and prevention; Bedside echocardiography: transthoracic echocardiography; Transoesophageal echocardiography;
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