Description

Book Synopsis
Arriving in the anaesthetic room for the first time can be a daunting experience. You will be closely supervised, but everything will seem very new. Surgery is a stressful life-event for the patient and your job as an anaesthetist is to make it as safe and as comfortable as you can whilst ensuring the best outcome possible. Anaesthesia is no longer the preserve of the medical anaesthetist. It increasingly features in undergraduate and postgraduate healthcare education, and many of the competencies required need to be attained quickly, in conjunction with new drugs and equipment. This guide provides practical and clinically relevant advice in easily understandable sections to give you confidence and prepare you for your days in theatre - without the complicated physiology, pharmacology and physics. It allows you to understand the most common drugs and provides a rationale for using them. It's the perfect quick, clinical reference for dealing with common problems and emergencies; ideal for everyday use. This book is invaluable for anaesthetists starting out in their career, but is also highly recommended for Foundation, ACCS, ICM trainees, medical students, operating department trainees and nurses. It also provides an excellent revision basis for Primary FRCA candidates. 'This book provides the basic background and ground rules for how anaesthetists work, how they approach a problem and how one can prepare for it. Some of the initial chapters could be usefully read by all surgeons, especially those in Foundation Training posts, and medical students considering an anaesthetic or intensive placement. The use of lists, key points and limited use of references help make the book easy to read, or dip into between cases, and keep it a manageable size whilst still providing a mine of information for the target audience.' From the Foreword by Peter Nightingale

Table of Contents
Foreword. Preface. List of contributors. Acknowledgement. The fundamental principles of anaesthesia. A very brief history of anaesthesia. The anaesthetic day. Pre-operative assessment and investigations. Intra-operative patient monitoring. The anaesthetic machine. Anaesthetic breathing systems. Ventilation. Airway assessment. Airway management. Basic patient positioning. Recovery, handover and protocols. Postoperative analgesia. Drugs that put you to sleep. Drugs to keep you asleep: the inhalational agents. Muscle relaxants. Drugs that stop you vomiting. Emergency drugs. NCEPOD catagories and anaesthetic implications. The pregnant patient. The obese patient. The cardiac patient presenting for non-cardiac surgery. The patient with respiratory disease. Paediatric anaesthesia. Day case surgery and anaesthesia. Transferring the anaesthetised patient. Regional anaesthesia. Stridor. Anaphylaxis. Major haemorrhage. Rapid Sequence induction at a remote site. Asthma and anaesthesia. Management of a patient with suspected anaphylaxis during anaesthesia. Checklist for anaesthetic equipment. Management of severe local anaesthetic toxicity. Guidelines for the management of a malignant hyperthermia crisis. Index.

Anaesthetics for Junior Doctors and Allied

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    A Paperback / softback by Daniel Cottle, Laha Shondipon

    15 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of Anaesthetics for Junior Doctors and Allied by Daniel Cottle

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 21/08/2013
      ISBN13: 9781846195518, 978-1846195518
      ISBN10: 1846195519

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Arriving in the anaesthetic room for the first time can be a daunting experience. You will be closely supervised, but everything will seem very new. Surgery is a stressful life-event for the patient and your job as an anaesthetist is to make it as safe and as comfortable as you can whilst ensuring the best outcome possible. Anaesthesia is no longer the preserve of the medical anaesthetist. It increasingly features in undergraduate and postgraduate healthcare education, and many of the competencies required need to be attained quickly, in conjunction with new drugs and equipment. This guide provides practical and clinically relevant advice in easily understandable sections to give you confidence and prepare you for your days in theatre - without the complicated physiology, pharmacology and physics. It allows you to understand the most common drugs and provides a rationale for using them. It's the perfect quick, clinical reference for dealing with common problems and emergencies; ideal for everyday use. This book is invaluable for anaesthetists starting out in their career, but is also highly recommended for Foundation, ACCS, ICM trainees, medical students, operating department trainees and nurses. It also provides an excellent revision basis for Primary FRCA candidates. 'This book provides the basic background and ground rules for how anaesthetists work, how they approach a problem and how one can prepare for it. Some of the initial chapters could be usefully read by all surgeons, especially those in Foundation Training posts, and medical students considering an anaesthetic or intensive placement. The use of lists, key points and limited use of references help make the book easy to read, or dip into between cases, and keep it a manageable size whilst still providing a mine of information for the target audience.' From the Foreword by Peter Nightingale

      Table of Contents
      Foreword. Preface. List of contributors. Acknowledgement. The fundamental principles of anaesthesia. A very brief history of anaesthesia. The anaesthetic day. Pre-operative assessment and investigations. Intra-operative patient monitoring. The anaesthetic machine. Anaesthetic breathing systems. Ventilation. Airway assessment. Airway management. Basic patient positioning. Recovery, handover and protocols. Postoperative analgesia. Drugs that put you to sleep. Drugs to keep you asleep: the inhalational agents. Muscle relaxants. Drugs that stop you vomiting. Emergency drugs. NCEPOD catagories and anaesthetic implications. The pregnant patient. The obese patient. The cardiac patient presenting for non-cardiac surgery. The patient with respiratory disease. Paediatric anaesthesia. Day case surgery and anaesthesia. Transferring the anaesthetised patient. Regional anaesthesia. Stridor. Anaphylaxis. Major haemorrhage. Rapid Sequence induction at a remote site. Asthma and anaesthesia. Management of a patient with suspected anaphylaxis during anaesthesia. Checklist for anaesthetic equipment. Management of severe local anaesthetic toxicity. Guidelines for the management of a malignant hyperthermia crisis. Index.

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