23 research outputs found

    Postoperative Cardiac Complications

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    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Myocardial Ischemia/MI Arrhythmias CHF Conclusion Reference

    Update in Perioperative Medicine 2013

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    Perioperative medicine is an important and rapidly expanding area of interest across multiple specialties, including internal medicine, anesthesiology, surgery, and hospital medicine. A multi-specialty team approach that ensures best possible patient outcomes has fostered collaborative strategies across the continuum of patient care. It is difficult to keep current in this multidisciplinary field, as physicians interested in perioperative medicine would need to review multiple specialty journals on a regular basis. To facilitate this process, we performed a focused review of this literature published in 2012. In this update, we review 9 key articles that potentially impact clinical practice in various areas of perioperative medicine including preoperative testing, cardiovascular medicine, pulmonary care, anticoagulation, and medication management

    Updates in venous thromboembolism management: evidence published in 2016

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    <p>The management of venous thromboembolic disease (VTE) is rapidly evolving and staying updated on practice-changing evidence can be challenging. In an attempt to alleviate this daunting task, we sought to determine the most important practice-informing articles published in 2016 relevant to the non-specialist provider managing VTE. We performed a systematic search of the literature, limiting the search to a publication date of 2016 (see Supplementary Appendix). Two reviewers screened the 3819 resulting abstracts to identify high-quality, clinically relevant publications related to VTE management.</p> <p>Two hundred sixteen full-text articles were considered for inclusion. The five authors used a modified Delphi method to reach consensus on inclusion of 7 articles for in-depth appraisal, following predetermined criteria of clinical relevance to non-specialist providers, potential for practice change, and strength of the evidence.</p
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