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E-raamat: Beginner's Guide to Intensive Care: A Handbook for Junior Doctors and Allied Professionals 2nd edition [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by , Edited by (Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Sharoe Green Lane North, Preston, PR2 9HT, UK)
  • Formaat: 484 pages, 7 Line drawings, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Jul-2018
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9781315264974
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 276,97 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 395,67 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 484 pages, 7 Line drawings, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Jul-2018
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9781315264974
Teised raamatud teemal:
‘…provides an excellent introduction to the management of acute illness for all clinical staff, and a solid foundation for those who choose to make ICM a fulfilling life-long career.’ From the Foreword by Julian Bion, Professor of Intensive Care Medicine, University of Birmingham Foundation year doctors are frequently rotated to Intensive Care Units (ICUs) and, like many of those new to intensive care, find that the standard texts on this challenging clinical environment are too comprehensive to provide an introduction or day-to-day reference. This simple bedside handbook fills that gap, providing a pragmatic guide to the basics of ICU, patient management and emergencies, as well as topical areas like organ donation, using social media for learning, and management of the acutely ill patient. New to this edition, the book contains chapters on Sepsis, ARDS, Refractory Hypoxia, post-ICU syndrome, Point of Care Ultrasound, and Stress/Burnout; often from world-renowned contributors. It also addresses consent and capacity, including the new DOLS guidance.The second edition is newly divided into 7 sections: Basics; The Multidisciplinary Team; Initial Assessment: The First Hour; Drugs; Equipment and Investigations; Airway and Respiratory Emergencies; Other Emergencies and Management. Each section is broken into short, easy-to-read topics, which have clearly outlined learning goals, summaries and emphasise the continuities between intensive care medicine and other forms of care.Foundation, Acute Common Stem and Anaesthesia junior doctors facing their initial attachment in Intensive Care will find this essential reading. Now even more accessible for non-career ICU doctors, it will also be an invaluable guide for ACCPs, outreach nurses, medical students, pharmacists, physiotherapists and allied health professionals.  
Foreword ix
Acknowledgements xi
Editors xiii
Contributors xv
Introduction xxi
PART 1 BASICS
1(46)
1 Your first day and what to expect
3(4)
James Turner
Joyce Yeung
2 The daily review of a patient
7(6)
Shondipon K. Laha
3 Communication
13(8)
Mark Pugh
Robert Fallon
4 Capacity and consent
21(6)
Angela Day
Michael Elliot
5 FOAMed and social media as an aid to education in intensive care
27(6)
Jonathan Downham
6 Research in intensive care
33(6)
Catriona Frankling
Gavin Perkins
7 Stress and burnout in intensive care medicine: Looking after yourself
39(8)
Olusegun Olusanya
Adrian Wong
PART 2 STAFFING ON THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT: THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY TEAM
47(20)
8 The intensive care nurse
49(2)
Gavin Denton
9 Speech and language therapists
51(4)
Asfa Bashir
Nicola Pargeter
Lucy Wood
10 The critical care physiotherapist
55(4)
Sarah Bunting
11 Advanced critical care practitioners (ACCP)
59(4)
Gavin Denton
12 The critical care pharmacist
63(4)
Adeyemi Oyedele
PART 3 INITIAL ASSESSMENT: THE FIRST HOUR
67(38)
13 Assessing ICU referrals on the ward
69(6)
Catriona Frankling
Joyce Yeung
14 Assessment and management of major trauma patients
75(10)
Ian Tyrell-Marsh
Edward Denison-Davies
15 Management of the head-injured patient
85(10)
Kunal Lund
Thomas Owen
16 Initial management of the patient with burns
95(10)
Karen Meacher
Nitin Arora
PART 4 DRUGS
105(28)
17 Analgesia, sedation and muscle relaxation
107(10)
Hozefa Ebrahim
18 Drugs that work on the heart
117(8)
Rachel Howarth
Andrew Haughton
19 Nutrition and fluids in intensive care
125(8)
Ben Slater
PART 5 EQUIPMENT AND INVESTIGATIONS
133(56)
20 Face masks, continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and airways
135(10)
Anna Herbert
Shondipon K. Laha
21 The ventilator
145(6)
Irfan Chaudry
22 Monitoring the critical care patient
151(8)
Rochelle Velho
Robert O'Brien
23 Ultrasound in intensive care
159(12)
Adrian Wong
Olusegun Olusanya
24 Renal replacement therapy in intensive care
171(8)
Aoife Abbey
Nitin Arora
25 Interpreting arterial blood gases (ABGs)
179(10)
Nafeesa Akhtar
Julian Hull
PART 6 AIRWAY AND RESPIRATORY EMERGENCIES
189(42)
26 Maintaining an airway
191(4)
Vijay Venkatesh
Nitin Arora
27 Rapid sequence induction
195(12)
Sudhindra Kulkarni
Shondipon K. Laha
28 Endotracheal tube and tracheostomy problems
207(12)
Brendan McGrath
29 `Fighting the ventilator'
219(6)
Mohammed Hatab
Peter Frank
30 Pneumothorax
225(6)
Gareth P. Jones
Amanda Shaw
PART 7 OTHER EMERGENCIES
231(56)
31 Cardiac arrhythmias
233(8)
Katherine Turner
Peter Bunting
Mike Dickinson
32 ICU delirium and the agitated patient
241(10)
Nicholas R. Plummer
Shondipon K. Laha
33 Status epilepticus
251(8)
Bryony Patrick
Andrew Gosling
34 The critically ill or injured child in a non-paediatric hospital
259(10)
Eldilla Rizal
Nitin Arora
35 Management of hyperglycaemic emergencies
269(10)
Ben Wooldridge
Paul Johnston
36 Poisoning
279(8)
Nagendra Pinnampeni
Arumugam Jagadeeswaran
PART 8 MANAGEMENT
287(156)
37 Pneumonia
289(8)
Joseph Herold
Shondipon K. Laha
38 Acute severe asthma
297(8)
Carl Groves
Govindan Raghuraman
39 The COPD patient in intensive care
305(8)
Daniel Park
40 Acute respiratory distress syndrome
313(8)
Richard Benson
Craig Spencer
41 Sepsis
321(10)
Daniel Shuttleworth
Ron Daniels
42 Acute renal failure in intensive care (Acute kidney injury)
331(8)
Nitin Arora
Shondipon K. Laha
43 Management of severe acute pancreatitis
339(10)
Laura Dyal
Fang Gao
44 Hepatic failure
349(10)
Fayaz Baba
Mark Pugh
45 Non-traumatic brain injuries
359(12)
Richard Yardley
Shashikumar Chandrashekaraiah
46 Ongoing management of the patient with burns
371(6)
Karen Meacher
Thomas Owen
47 Ageing and frailty
377(10)
Vanisha Patel
Joyce Yeung
48 Transfer of the critically ill patient
387(10)
Emma Foster
Neil Crooks
49 The critically ill obstetric patient
397(16)
Jennifer Hares
Naresh Sandur
50 The bariatric patient in intensive care
413(8)
Helga Fichter
51 Post-ICU syndrome
421(6)
Jonathan Paige
Anna Dennis
52 End of life care in ICU
427(8)
Sarah Milton-White
Lucie Linhartova
53 Brain stem death and organ donation
435(8)
Huw Twamley
Index 443
Dr Nitin Arora FRCA FRCPE FFICM is a Consultant in Intensive Care & Anaesthesia, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, UK



Dr Shondipon K. Laha MA FRCA FFICM is a Consultant in Critical Care & Anaesthesia, Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK