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  • Book
    edited by Graham Arthurs, Wrexham Maelor Hospital, Wrexham, UK, and Barry Nicholls, Taunton and Somerset HNS Foundation Trust, Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton, Somerset, UK.
    Summary: This up-to-date, revised edition on ultrasound in anesthesia has now been expanded to cover the important areas of pain management and critical care, and includes the new Royal College of Anaesthetists' guidelines for using ultrasound in anesthesia and intensive care. A comprehensive, practical guide, it explains the benefits of ultrasound for all essential practices, ranging from vascular access and local anesthetic blocks in adults and children, to cardiac assessment, trauma and intensive care practice, pain management and more. Additional resources include over one hundred still and video clips, allowing the reader to view ultrasound sequences while reading the relevant chapter. Written by ultrasound experts, this is the perfect introductory text for medical consultants and any trainee or medical student who needs a step-by-step guide to how ultrasound works, how to use it themselves, how to get the best images and when to ask a sonographer for help.

    Contents:
    Principles of medical ultrasound / Graham Arthurs and Trevor Frankel
    Ultrasound to aid vascular access / Philip Haslam
    Diagnostic echocardiolography / Tom Ingram
    The role of echocardiography in the haemodynamically unstable patient in critical care and the operating theatre / Paul James, Julian Skoyles and Henry Skinner
    Transesophageal diagnostic doppler monitoring / Robert Kong
    Ultrasound in critical care / David Southern and Dylan John
    Ultrasound and airway management / Thomas M. Hemmerling and Marilu Giacalone
    The use of ultrasound in the traumatised patient and the acute abdomen / Angie Lloyd-Jones, Owen Rees and David A. Parker
    The use of ultrasound to aid local anesthetic nerve blocks in adults / Barry Nicholls, Stephan Kapral, Peter Marhofer and Alice Roberts
    US guided nerve blocks in children / Steve Roberts and Alasdair Howie
    Cranial ultrasound in the newborn / Owen Arthurs
    The use of ultrasound in acute gynecology and pregnancy assessment / William Taylor
    Ocular ultrasonography / Thomas M. Hemmerling and Marilu Giacalone
    The use of ultrasound in assessing soft tissue injury / Geoff Hide
    The use of ultrasound in pain management / Shyam Balasubramanian and A.T. Arasu Rayen.
    Digital Access Cambridge 2016
  • Article
    Bridger WA, Paranchych W.
    Can J Biochem. 1978 Jun;56(6):403-6.
    Starvation of Escherichia coli K12 for an amino acid results in the stimulation of bacterial glycogen synthesis in cells containing the relA+ gene, but not in cells carrying the relA- allele. Similarly, a large difference in glycogen content is demonstrable between relA+ and relA- cells in stationary phase. It is concluded that guanosine 5',3' -bis(diphosphate) (ppGPP) or some related relA -dependent metabolite is involved in the regulation of bacterial glycogen synthesis. Detection of significant basal levels of glycogen in a relA- strain of E. coli and in unstarved relA+ C. coli indicates that relA control is not absolutely required for glycogen synthesis but serves as a signal for modulation in response to nutrient availability.
    Digital Access Access Options