EMERGENCY AIRWAY MANAGEMENT

EMERGENCY AIRWAY MANAGEMENT

Editorial:
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Año de edición:
Materia
Anestesia
ISBN:
978-1-107-66125-7
Páginas:
200
N. de edición:
2
Idioma:
Inglés
Disponibilidad:
Disponible en 2-3 semanas

Descuento:

-5%

Antes:

50,50 €

Despues:

47,98 €

From principles of oxygen delivery and patient assessment, through rapid sequence induction of anaesthesia and tracheal intubation, to the difficult and failed emergency airway, this book from an expert team of clinicians guides the reader through every aspect of emergency airway management. Retaining the concise, accessible format of the first edition, it includes a new section on human factors and improving teamwork and performance, an expanded special circumstances section, and a summary of the 4th National Audit Project of the Royal College of Anaesthetists and Difficult Airway Society and its implications for practice. Updated guidelines, new technologies such as videolaryngoscopy, and recent evidence have all been incorporated into the chapter content, ensuring that the book reflects best current practice. This thoroughly updated new edition remains an essential resource for navigating a highly challenging clinical scenario and will be of value to emergency medicine, intensive care, anaesthesia and acute medicine clinicians.
- Mnemonics and algorithms enable quick reference and rapid understanding
- The official course manual of the updated UK Training in Emergency Airway Management (TEAM) course
- A comprehensive and clear guide, suitable for an audience which covers multiple specialties.

Authors
Andrew Burtenshaw, Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust
Jonathan Benger, University of the West of England, Bristol
Jerry Nolan, Royal United Hospital, Bath.

Contents
1. Introduction Andrew Burtenshaw, Jonathan Benger and Jerry Nolan
2. Delivery of oxygen Carl Gwinnutt
3. Basic airway management Stephen Bush and David Ray
4. Indications for intubation Colin Graham and Dermot McKeown
5. Airway assessment Dominic Williamson and Jerry Nolan
6. Preparation for rapid sequence induction Simon J. A. Chapman and Les Gordon
7. Pharmacology of emergency airway drugs Shirley Lindsay and Jonathan Benger
8. Rapid sequence induction and tracheal intubation Jonathan Hulme and Dinendra S. Gill
9. Difficult and failed airway Dermot McKeown and Gavin Lloyd
10. Post-intubation management Paul Younge and John C. Berridge
11. Emergency airway management in special circumstances: a. Paediatrics Patricia Weir and Paul Younge
b. Trauma and raised intracranial pressure Jonathan Hulme and Dinendra S. Gill
c. Cardiorespiratory Gavin Perkins
d. Non-traumatic coma and seizures Carl Gwinnutt
e. Pre-hospital care Jonathan Benger
f. The pregnant patient John Clift
12. Non-invasive ventilatory support Dinendra S. Gill and Gavin Perkins
13. Human factors Andrew Burtenshaw, Colin A. Graham and Kevin Fong
Appendix 1. Mnemonics
Appendix 2. Emergency airway algorithms
Appendix 3. Example intubation checklist
Appendix 4. NAP4 summary Tim Cook, Nick Woodall, Chris Frerk and Jonathan Benger
Index.