28 research outputs found

    37th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine (part 3 of 3)

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    Des Pneumonies anomales, par le Dr Lhuillier

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    Avec mode text

    La grande conference des ordonnances, et edits royaux : distribvee en XII. livres, a l\u27imitation & selon l\u27ordre & distribution du code de l\u27Empereur Justinien

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    A Paris : Chez Antoine Dezallier , 1679[14], 180, 769, [1] p. ; 38 cm. (fol.)Signatures: [*][4] (-*3) 2*[4] a-p[6] A-3S[6] (k3, 2S2, 2S6 misprinted k2, 2R2, 2S4)Errors in paging: p. 29-30 of [3rd pt.], 409-410 omitted, p. 33-34 of [3rd pt.], repeated, p. 52 of [3rd pt.], 212, 413-414, 419-420, 484, 539, 595, 610, 765 numbered 51, 112, 411-412, 417-418, 480, 536, 695, 601, 763Imperfect: p. [5]-[6] wanting"Purgee de grande quantité de fautes, qui s\u27estoient glissées aux precedentes impressions, avec la chronologie, et les indices tres-exacts"T.p. in red and blackhttps://www.tulips.tsukuba.ac.jp/lib/ja/collection/bunko-collection#23

    Fashion Exhibitions as Scholarship: Evaluation Criteria for Peer Review

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    Curated exhibitions are places where research practice, creative design, storytelling, and aesthetics converge. In this article, we use the term “fashion exhibition” to refer to the organized display of extant dress-related items within museums or other public spaces. Curation, as a form of creative design research, produces numerous outcomes including museum exhibitions, digital archives, and associated publications; however, our field has not yet established a method to peer review fashion exhibitions. In this article, we build upon the work of previous scholars to propose criteria for evaluating fashion exhibitions. In doing so, we aim to elevate the scholarly status of fashion exhibitions, particularly those mounted by modestly funded institutions, and use the recent fashion exhibition, “Women Empowered: Fashions from the Frontline,” as an example to illustrate our argument

    Haematic Antegrade Repriming procedure to initiate a safer cardiopulmonary bypass.

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    SUMMARY: Background: Cardiopulmonary bypass is a safe technique frequently required in cardiac surgery. Despite that, it carries several undesired effects related to haemodilution, emboli and alterations on the coagulation and microcirculation. Different strategies like the minimized circuits (MiECC) or the retrograde autologous priming (RAP) have attemped to reduce its impact, but finally lead to inconsistent results as independent measures due to the heterogeneity on its practice. The haematic antegrade repriming (HAR) detailes a standardized materials and methodology that could offer a reproducible method inspired in evidence-based recommendations. Description of the technique: HAR is performed in a standardized Class IV MiECC that is reprimed antegradely with autologous blood obtained from the aorta of the patient, before the cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) initiation. Then, CPB is started with the support of vacuum assisted venous drainage (VAVD). Discussion: The strict application of HAR results in a fix haemodilution of 300ml of crystalloid priming, avoiding the sudden haemodilution and the crystalloid embolism of the CPB initiation. The synergic effect that converges in HAR could exceed the evidence-based benefits of RAP, MiECC and VAVD promising to improve the outcomes in terms of transfusion, complications, stay and survival. Conclusion: HAR is proposed as a new approach to increase the safety of the CPB. Its overall benefits should be properly assessed and validated by current and further studies.Improved graphics indications and procedure
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