Articles Tagged With:
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Using Ketamine in the Critically Ill: A Clinical Review
This is a guideline for ketamine use in the appropriate clinical setting from the practicing intensivist’s perspective.
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Management of Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection
In the largest study to date about patients with spontaneous coronary artery dissection who underwent follow-up angiography, 95% of those who underwent repeat cath more than 30 days later showed spontaneous angiographic healing.
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Impact of Atrial Fibrillation on Survival in Patients With Severe Mitral Regurgitation
A large observational study of patients with severe mitral valve regurgitation due to flail leaflets revealed that atrial fibrillation at entry was associated with excess mortality.
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Who Needs a TEE Prior to Atrial Fibrillation Cardioversion?
A study of patients with atrial fibrillation or flutter undergoing transesophageal echocardiography showed a left atrial appendage thrombus in 8% overall and 4% in those appropriately anticoagulated.
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Medication First? Ablation First? Either Way, Make Weight Loss a Priority
Weight loss management and aggressive risk factor modification associated with slowing or even reversal of atrial fibrillation progression.
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Withdrawal of Medical Therapy Associated With Relapse in Recovered Dilated Cardiomyopathy
In patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and recovered ejection fraction, discontinuation of heart failure medical therapies was associated with a 44% risk of relapse within six months.
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AMA Calls on Tech Companies to Fight Back Against Misleading Vaccine Information
Rising measles outbreaks cause concern for entire medical community.
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Providers Experience Moral Distress in Pediatric Mental Healthcare
Of 23 reported occurrences of moral distress, 61% involved pediatric mental health cases, found a recent study.
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Sarasota Memorial Hospital Implements Sweeping Initiative, Raising HCAHPS Scores
Among patients aged 80 years and older, the hospital was achieving average patient satisfaction in only two of 10 measures.
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Wrongful Delegation Can Happen Easily; Consequences Are Serious
Risk managers should educate nurses about the potential liability risks from wrongful delegation, which could threaten the nurse’s career and expose the hospital.