Publications by authors named "J E Scovil"

The challenge of providing effective treatment services for the growing population of HIV-positive individuals who are also dually diagnosed with substance use and mental disorders has only recently been recognized as an important public health concern affecting both HIV treatment and prevention. This article describes a treatment model that was created for a study of integrated treatment for HIV-positive individuals with substance use and mental disorders. The treatment model was based on the transtheoretical model of behavior change as well as evidence-based practices that are widely used in the treatment of individuals dually diagnosed with substance use and mental disorders.

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Twenty patients about to have coronary artery bypass grafts were studied before and after 15 min of 50% nitrous oxide added to either fentanyl (75 micrograms/kg) or enflurane (0.5%) anesthesia. Arterial and central pressures and cardiac output were measured, plus coronary sinus blood flow and arterio-coronary sinus differences in oxygen, hemoglobin, and lactate contents.

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Fentanyl (mean dose 109 micrograms X kg-1) and oxygen were given to ten patients having coronary vein grafts. Serial studies were done before, during and after operation, of central and mean arterial pressures (MAP), cardiac index (CI) and coronary sinus flow (CBF) by thermodilution, myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2) and lactate extraction (MLE). On induction CI and stroke work index decreased, but heart rate and MAP were unchanged as systemic resistance increased.

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Ten patients were studied before, during and after enflurane anaesthesia for coronary vein grafting. All had good ventricular function and nine were receiving effective beta blockade. Cardiac output and vascular pressures were measured, plus coronary sinus blood flow (CBF), myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2) and lactate extraction (MLE).

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M-mode echocardiographic right ventricular wall thickness (RVW) and diastolic right ventricular internal diameter (RVID), when above the accepted normal range (RVW less than or equal to 5 mm, RVID less than or equal to 26 mm), are frequently used clinically to predict the presence of right ventricular hypertrophy. RVID was compared to anatomic right ventricular mass (RVM) in 27 patients and to RVW in 13 patients to determine their accuracy for predicting right ventricular hypertrophy (RVM greater than 65 gm). When increased, both measurements were specific for right ventricular hypertrophy.

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