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  • Book
    Kathirvel Subramaniam, Tetsuro Sakai, editors.
    Summary: This comprehensive textbook, covering all aspects of the perioperative management of patients undergoing organ transplantation, serves as the standard reference for clinicians who care for transplant patients on a day-to-day basis as well as those who encounter organ transplantation only occasionally in their clinical practice. Anesthesia and Perioperative Care for Organ Transplantation covers transplantation of the heart, lung, liver, pancreas, and kidney, as well as multivisceral and composite tissue graft transplantations. For each kind of transplantation, the full spectrum of perioperative considerations is addressed: preoperative preparation, intraoperative anesthesia management, surgical techniques, and postoperative care. Each chapter contains evidence-based recommendations, relevant society guidelines, management algorithms, and institutional protocols as tables, flow diagrams, and figures. Photographs demonstrating surgical techniques, anesthesia procedures, and perfusion management are included. Anesthesia and Perioperative Care for Organ Transplantation is for anesthesiologists and critical care physicians; transplantation surgeons; nurse anesthetists; ICU nurses; and trainees.
    Digital Access Springer 2017
  • Article
    Bezwoda WR, Bothwell TH, Van Der Walt LA, Kronheim S, Pimstone BL.
    Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 1977 May;6(5):377-85.
    Endocrine studies were performed on twelve patients with proven idiopathic haemochromatosis. Basal gonadotrophin levels and/or their responses to LH releasing hormone (LHRH) were low in nine patients, all of whom showed low plasma testosterone levels and clinical evidence of hypogonadism. Those patients with normal gonadotrophin responses had higher testosterone values, suggesting that the poor testosterone secretion was primarily due to inadequate trophic stimulation. No patient showed hypothyroidism of hypothalamic-pituitary origin, while the cortisol response to hypoglycaemia was normal in all six patients studied. GH responses were more variable and difficult to interpret, since the number of the patients studied was small and the degree of hypoglycaemia after insulin was unpredictable.
    Digital Access Access Options