Page 338 - Clinical Application of Mechanical Ventilation
P. 338

304    Chapter 10


                      References







                      Ahrens, T. S. (1991). Effects of mechanical ventilation on hemodynamic waveforms. Critical Care Nursing Clinics
                        of North America, 3, 629–639.
                      Bishop, M., William, C., Shoemaker, M. D., Julia Shuleshko, D. O., & Charles, C. J. (1996). Noninvasive car-
                        diac index monitoring in gunshot wound victims. Academic Emergency Medicine, 7, 682–688.

                      Blacher, J., Staessen, J. A., Girerd, X., Gasowski, J., Thijs, L., Liu, L., Wang, J. G., Fagard, R. H., & Safar, M. E.
                        (2000). Pulse pressure not mean pressure determines cardiovascular risk in older hypertensive patients. Archives
                        of Internal Medicine, 160 (8), 1085–1089.
                      Braždžionytė, J., Macas, A., Baksyte, G., & Mickeviciene, A. (2004b). Routine noninvasive hemodynamic
                        monitoring in acute myocardial infarction: Application possibilities. Critical Care, 8 (Suppl. 1), 63.
                      Braždžionytė, J., Macas, A., Žaliūnas, R., Bakšytė, G., & Mickevičienė, A. (2004a). Noninvasive monitoring of
                        central hemodynamics in acute myocardial infarction: A comparison of hemodynamic indices obtained by two
                        different methods—impedance cardiography and transthoracic echocardiography. Seminars in Interventional
                        Cardiology, 10(1), 25–32.

                      Bustin, D. (1986). Hemodynamic monitoring for critical care. Norwalk, CT: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
                      Campbell, M. L., & Greenberg, C. A. (1988). Reading pulmonary artery wedge pressure at end-expiration. Focus
                        on Critical Care, 15, 60–63.

                      Christensen, B. (1992a). Hemodynamic monitoring: What it tells you and what it doesn’t, Part I. Journal of Post
                        Anesthesia Nursing, 7(5), 330–337.

                      Christensen, B. (1992b). Hemodynamic monitoring: What it tells you and what it doesn’t, Part II. Journal of Post
                        Anesthesia Nursing, 7(5), 338–345.
                      Clancy, T. V., Norman, K., Reynolds, R., Covington, D., & Maxwell, J. G. (1991). Cardiac output measurement in
                        critical care patients: Thoracic electrical bioimpedance versus thermodilution. Journal of Trauma, 31, 1116–1119.
                      Daily, E. K., & Schroeder, J. S. (1985). Techniques in bedside hemodynamic monitoring. St. Louis, MO: Mosby.

                      Della, R. G., Costa, M. G., Pompei, M. L., Coccia C., & Pietropaoli, P. (2002). Continuous and intermit-
                        tent cardiac output measurement: pulmonary artery catheter versus aortic transpulmonary technique. British
                        Journal of Anaesthesia, 88(3), 350–356.
                      DiCorte, C. J., Latham, P., Greilich, P. E., Cooley, M. V., Grayburn, P. A., & Jessen, M. E. (2000). Esophageal
                        Doppler monitor determinations of cardiac output and preload during cardiac operations. Annals of Thoracic
                        Surgery, 69, 1782–1786.

                      Drazner, M., Kamath, S. A., Tasissa, G., Rogers, J. G., Stevenson, L. W., & Yancy, C. W. (2002). Comparison of
                        impedance cardiography with invasive hemo-dynamic measurements in patients with heart failure secondary
                        to ischemic or nonischemic cardiomyopathy. American Journal of Cardiology, 89(8), 993–995.
                      Fletcher, E. C. (1988). Accuracy of fiberoptic central venous saturation catheter below 50%. Journal of Applied
                        Physiology, 64(5), 2220–2223.
                      Franz, A. K. (1996). Home cardiac monitoring and technology. In Gorski L. (Ed.), High tech home care manual
                        (Vol. 19, Suppl. 2, pp. 1–18), Rockville, MD: Aspen Publishing.








                        Copyright 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
                      Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343