Publications by authors named "Denis L Bourke"

There is precedent in medicine for recognizing and accepting intact decisional capacity and the subsequent ability to provide valid consent in one treatment domain, while simultaneously recognizing that the patient lacks decisional capacity in other domains. As such, obtaining consent for anesthesia for a surgical procedure is a separate entity from obtaining consent for the surgery itself. Anesthesia for surgery and the surgical procedure itself are separate treatment domains and as such require separate consents.

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Many physicians overlook, or are unaware of, most drug-drug interactions. In our patient, the local anesthetic used for an axillary block may have been the precipitating drug in a cascade of drug-drug interactions that resulted in a cardiac arrest. The combination of multiple preoperative drug-drug interactions prevented the return of a stable native cardiac rhythm for almost 24 h.

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We studied the outcome of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in patients undergoing coronary angiography (CA) and/or percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). Of 51,985 CA and PCI patients treated between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2000, 114 required CPR. Records were reviewed for relationships between patient characteristics and various procedures and short-term survival.

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Objective: To investigate the Incidence of postoperative venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients who had flown long distances before major surgery.

Patients And Methods: Using the Mayo Clinic computerized patient database, we Identified patients who had flown more than 5000 km before major surgery (travelers) and had experienced an episode of clinically significant VTE within 28 days after surgery. Individual medical records were reviewed for the diagnosis of VTE, pertinent risk factors, and outcome.

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A patient with unrecognized atypical pseudocholinesterase was given succinylcholine and then vecuronium before neuromuscular monitoring was instituted. Subsequently, when neostigmine and glycopyrrolate were given to reverse what was thought to be a nondepolarizing block, the patient became further relaxed, and his trachea could not be extubated for more than 10 hours. In this report, we discuss drug interactions, phase II block, and the importance of timely neuromuscular monitoring.

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We report a case of myocardial stunning in a healthy patient. During gynecologic surgery, two brief episodes of asystole occurred. Following resuscitation there was a short period of severe hypertension and tachycardia.

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Background: The effects of morbid obesity, pneumoperitoneum (PP) and body position on cardiac function during laparoscopy were studied.

Methods: Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) was performed on 10 obese patients (body mass index, BMI, 48.1+/-1.

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During anesthesia, a nurse draped several gas hoses over the ventilator relief valve on the back of the anesthesia machine, causing a malfunction. Unintended positive end-expiratory pressure was administered to the patient. Causes of this mishap, anesthesia machine design, and nonanesthesiologist familiarity with anesthesia machine components and their function, are discussed.

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Unlabelled: Morbidly obese (MO) patients undergoing laparoscopy have lower PaO(2) compared with normal-weight (NW) patients. We hypothesized that increases in tidal volume (V(T)) or respiratory rate (RR) would improve oxygenation. All measurements were performed at: 1) baseline: V(T) 600-700 mL and 10 breaths/min, 2) double V(T): V(T) 1200-1400 mL and 10 breaths/min, and 3) double rate: V(T) 600-700 mL and 20 breaths/min.

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