120 results on '"Umedaly A"'
Search Results
2. In reply: Comment on: The evolution and formalization of anesthesia assistant roles across Canada: In reply: Comment on: The evolution and formalization...
- Author
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Yang, Homer, Littleford, Judith, Orser, Beverley A., Zaccagnini, Marco, Umedaly, Hamed, Olsen, Monica, Raazi, Mateen, LeDez, Kenneth, Law, J. Adam, Giffin, Mitch, Foerster, Jason, D’Souza, Brandon, Ali, Irfaan, Dillane, Derek, Christodoulou, Chris, Buu, Natalie, and Bryan, Rob
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pediatric pulse oximetry-based OSA screening at different thresholds of the apnea-hypopnea index with an expression of uncertainty for inconclusive classifications
- Author
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Garde, Ainara, Hoppenbrouwer, Xenia, Dehkordi, Parastoo, Zhou, Guohai, Rollinson, Aryannah Umedaly, Wensley, David, Dumont, Guy A., and Ansermino, J. Mark
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Vancouver 3M (Multidisciplinary, Multimodality, But Minimalist) Clinical Pathway Facilitates Safe Next-Day Discharge Home at Low-, Medium-, and High-Volume Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Centers: The 3M TAVR Study
- Author
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Wood, David A., Lauck, Sandra B., Cairns, John A., Humphries, Karin H., Cook, Richard, Welsh, Robert, Leipsic, Jonathon, Genereux, Philippe, Moss, Robert, Jue, John, Blanke, Philipp, Cheung, Anson, Ye, Jian, Dvir, Danny, Umedaly, Hamed, Klein, Rael, Rondi, Kevin, Poulter, Rohan, Stub, Dion, Barbanti, Marco, Fahmy, Peter, Htun, Nay, Murdoch, Dale, Prakash, Roshan, Barker, Madeleine, Nickel, Kevin, Thakkar, Jay, Sathananthan, Janarthanan, Tyrell, Ben, Al-Qoofi, Faisal, Velianou, James L., Natarajan, Madhu K., Wijeysundera, Harindra C., Radhakrishnan, Sam, Horlick, Eric, Osten, Mark, Buller, Christopher, Peterson, Mark, Asgar, Anita, Palisaitis, Donald, Masson, Jean-Bernard, Kodali, Susheel, Nazif, Tamim, Thourani, Vinod, Babaliaros, Vasilis C., Cohen, David J., Park, Julie E., Leon, Martin B., and Webb, John G.
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Effects of handling and short-term captivity: a multi-behaviour approach using red sea urchins, Mesocentrotus franciscanus
- Author
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Aneesh P.H. Bose, Daniel Zayonc, Nikolaos Avrantinis, Natasha Ficzycz, Jonathan Fischer-Rush, Fiona T. Francis, Siobhan Gray, Faye Manning, Haley Robb, Coralee Schmidt, Christine Spice, Aari Umedaly, Jeff Warden, and Isabelle M. Côté
- Subjects
Invertebrate ,Reintroduction ,Relocation ,Echinoderm ,Stress ,Animal welfare ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Understanding the effects of captivity-induced stress on wild-caught animals after their release back into the wild is critical for the long-term success of relocation and reintroduction programs. To date, most of the research on captivity stress has focused on vertebrates, with far less attention paid to invertebrates. Here, we examine the effect of short-term captivity (i.e., up to four days) on self-righting, aggregation, and predator-escape behaviours in wild-caught red sea urchins, Mesocentrotus franciscanus, after their release back into the wild. Aggregation behaviour, which has been linked to feeding in sea urchins, was not affected by handling or captivity. In contrast, the sea urchins that had been handled and released immediately, as well as those that were handled and held captive, took longer to right themselves and were poorer at fleeing from predators than wild, unhandled sea urchins. These results indicate that handling rather than captivity impaired these behaviours in the short term. The duration of captivity did not influence the sea urchin behaviours examined. Longer-term monitoring is needed to establish what the fitness consequences of these short-term behavioural changes might be. Our study nevertheless highlights the importance of considering a suite of responses when examining the effects of capture and captivity. Our findings, which are based on a locally abundant species, can inform translocation efforts aimed at bolstering populations of ecologically similar but depleted invertebrate species to retain or restore important ecosystem functions.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Evaluation of a Novel Mobile Exergame in a School-Based Environment.
- Author
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Ainara Garde, Aryannah Umedaly, Sayed Mazdak Abulnaga, Anne Junker, Jean Pierre Chanoine, Mika Johnson, John Mark Ansermino, and Guy Albert Dumont
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
7. Safety, constraints and anti-windup in closed-loop anesthesia
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van Heusden, K., West, N., Umedaly, A., Ansermino, J.M., Merchant, R.N., and Dumont, G.A.
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- 2014
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8. Design and Clinical Evaluation of Robust PID Control of Propofol Anesthesia in Children.
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Klaske van Heusden, Guy Albert Dumont, Kristian Soltesz, Christian L. Petersen, Aryannah Umedaly, Nicholas West, and John Mark Ansermino
- Published
- 2014
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9. Evaluation of a Clinical Protocol to Assess and Diagnose Neuropathic Pain During Acute Hospital Admission: Results From Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury
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Bélanger, Lise M.A., Umedaly, Hamed S., Noonan, Vanessa K., Park, So Eyun, Prince, Jennifer, Thorogood, Nancy P., Shen, Tian, Townson, Andrea F., Street, John T., Dvorak, Marcel F., and Negraeff, Michael
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- 2018
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10. Abstract
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Rasic, Nivez F., Friesen, Robert M., Anderson, Bruce, Hoban, Shirley A., Olson, Nancy, Kress, Jacob, Lévesque, Simon, Lessard, Martin R., Nicole, Pierre, Langevin, Stéphan, Langevin, Jacques, LeBlanc, François, Brochu, Jacques, Turgeon, Alexis, Nicole, Pierre C., Lessard, Martin R., Trépanier, Claude A., Marcoux, Sylvie, Lash, Vynka C., Anderson, Keith, Asenjo, J. Francisco, Carli, Francesco, Engen, Dale A., Morewood, Gordon H., Ghazar, Nancy, Ashbury, Ted, VanDenKerkhof, Elizabeth G., Wang, Louie, Blight, Katherine R., Mazer, C. David, Hare, Gregory M. T., Wang, Zhilan, Coackley, Carla, Qu, Rong, Robb, Malcolm, Stewart, Duncan J., Schricker, Thomas, Meterissian, Sarkis, Lattermann, Ralph, Carli, Franco, Dupuis, Jean-Yves, Wang, Feng, Nathan, Howard, Williams, Kathryn, Robblee, James A., Nathan, Howard J., Dupuis, Jean-Yves, Wang, Feng, Ko, Raynauld, Kruger, Marelise, McRae, Karen, Darling, Gail, Waddell, Thomas, Morrice, David, McGlade, Desmond, Cheung, Ken, Katz, Joel, Slinger, Peter, Hare, Gregory M. T., Baker, Andrew J., Hum, Kathryn M., Kim, Steve Y., Qu, Rong, Barr, Aiala, Mazer, C. David, Friedman, Zeev, Wong, David T., Chung, Frances, VanDenKerkhof, Elizabeth G., Goldstein, David H., Blaine, William C., Rimmer, Michael J., Kolman, Jacelyn M., Hung, Orlando R., Beauprie, Ian G., Vandorpe, Robert, Baker, Chandran J., Rennie, William, Brown, Robert, Kenny, Susan, Kamming, Damon, McGrath, Brid, Chung, Frances, Curti, Bruna, King, Shirley, Lau, Brenda W., Ries, Craig R., Schmid, Josie, Kraima, Richard N., Arai, Toshimi, Yamashita, Masao, Splinter, William, Parekh, Uma R., Valois-Gomez, Teresa, Muir, John G., Usher, Andrew G., Kearney, Ramona A., Tsui, Ban C. H., Shende, D., Darlong, V., Asit, N., Tsui, Ban C. H., Richards, Justin, Van Aerde, John, Tsui, Ban C. H., Tsui, Ban C. H., Wagner, Alese, Cave, Dominic, Kearney, Ramona, Philips, Leeanne, Reid, Kathy, Chowdary, Khalid, Splinter, William, Brooks, Peter, Ree, Ron, Ansermino, Mark, Rosen, David, Manninen, Pirjo H., Ghazaime, Ghazali, Louissi, Soad, Odukoya, Bisi, Nathan, Howard J., Rodriguez, Rosendo A., Dupuis, Jean-Yves, Parlea, Luciana, Rubens, Fraser D., Hendry, Paul, Lee, Il-Ok, Lee, In Ho, Audu, Paul, Mak, Peter H. K., Manninen, Pirijo H., Sundar, Shanti, Schwarz, Stephan K. W., Puil, Ernest, Hybarger, Steven E., Sloan, Tod B., Brull, Richard, McCartney, Colin J. L., Rawson, Regan, Abbas, Sherif, Chan, Vincent W. S., Ong, D., Ha, D., Ha, H., McKay, W. P. S., Lee, Il-Ok, Kong, Myung-Hoon, Lee, Mi-Kyung, Lim, Sang-Ho, Choi, Young-Seok, Kim, Nan-Sook, Lennox, P. H., Umedaly, H. S., Keogh, C. F., Setton, D., Grant, R. P., Fitzmaurice, B. G., Evans, K., Lennox, P. H., Umedaly, H. S., White, S. A., Grant, R. P., Fitzmaurice, B. G., Evans, K., Chan, Vincent W. S., Watt-Watson, Judy, Chung, Frances, McGillion, Michael, Daley, M. Denise, Normanaf], Peter H., Hogervorst, Sarah, Kowalski, Alicia, Arens, James, Kennamer, Debra, Curley, Steven, Vauthey, Jean, Tsui, Ban C. H., Wagner, Alese, Finucaneaf], Brendan, Beattie, W. Scott, Choi, Peter, Chowdary, Khalid, Splinter, William, Donais, Phillip E., McKay, William P. S., Banner, Robert, Kennedy, Renee, Konok, George, Guglielmin, Darryl R., King, Francis G., Hwang, Kyungil, Kim, Hoondo, Lee, Sangho, Cardinal, Valérie, Martin, René, Tétreault, Jean-Pierre, Colas, Marie-José, Gagnon, Linda, Claprood, Yves, Schricker, Thomas, Wykes, Linda, Carli, Franco, Luo, Tao, Xia, Zhengyuan, Ansley, David M., Ouyang, Jingping, Xia, Zhong-Yuan, Brousseau, Paul, Dobson, Greg, Lummis, Heather, Arellano, Ramiro, Steinberg, David, Trigazis, Leo, Devito, Isabella, Downey, Kristi, Minogue, Sean, Ralph, James, Lampa, Martin, Roscoe, Andrew J., Sawchuk, Corey W., Fayad, Ashraf, Healey, Jeff, Crystal, Eugene, Teoh, Kevin, Lonn, Eva, Carroll, Sandra, Hohnloser, Stephan, Connolly, Stuart, Rodriguez, Rosendo A., Lavallee, Gilbert, Rubens, Fraser, Nathan, Howard J., Rodriguez, Rosendo A., Rodriguez, Carlos D., Lavallee, Gilbert, Rubens, Fraser D., Nathan, Howard J., Robitaille, Arnaud, Denault, André Y., Couture, Pierre, Bélisle, Sylvain, Fortier, Annik, Guertin, Marie-Claude, Carrier, Michel, Martineau, Raymond, Basran, Sukhjeewan, Frumento, Robert, O’Malley, Catherine, Mongero, Linda, Beck, James, Bennett-Guerrero, Elliott, Hemmerling, Thomas M., Choinière, Jen-Luc, Basile, Fadi, Prieto, Ignatio, Fortier, Joanne D., MacAdams, Charles, Fan, Lawrence, Seal, Douglas, Maier, Karen, Kowalewski, Richard, Tang, Tim, Haigh, John, Tofflemire, Karen, Norris, James Q., Howells, Steven, Browne, Joseph, Beney, Andrew, Pynn, Todd, Taylor, Steven, Mong, Kam, Djaiani, George, Fedorko, Ludwik, Carroll, Jo, Ali, Mohamed, Cheng, Davy, Klein, Andrew, Rakowski, Harry, Woo, Anna, Heinrich, Lee, Mikulis, David, Karski, Jacek, Sia, Alex, Chua, Sebastian, Hong, Xi, Gvozdic, Branka, Schricker, Thomas, Carli, Franco, Morgan, Pamela J., Tarshis, Jordan, Macarthur, Alison J., Brant, Rollin, Pollard, Jeffrey, Cook, Linda, Yoon, Hea Jo, Lee, Youn Woo, Hong, Jeong-Yeon, Kim, Soo Mie, Parkhurst, Sherry, Biehl, Diane, Ong, Bill, Lessard, Martin R., Nicole, Pierre, Brochuaf], Jacques, Langevin, Stéphan, Croft, Dary, Ho, Anthony M. -H., Lee, Tak Wai, Karmakar, Manoj K., Lam, Wynnie M., Chung, David C., Massicotte, Luc, Wilkes, Peter R. H., Legault, Stephan, Gupta, Sanjiv, Baxter, Alan D., Allan, J. E., Tsui, Ban C. H., Malherbe, Stephan, Baxter, Alan D., Allan, J., Bedard, J., Malone-Tucker, S., Slivar, S., Langil, M., Perrault, M., Janseo, O., Carvalho, George, Moore, Anne, Lachapelle, Kevin, Quizilbash, Baqir, Schricker, Thomas, Salem, Reda, Denault, André Y., Couture, Pierre, Bélisle, Sylvain, Fortier, Annik, Guertin, Marie-Claude, Carrier, Michel, Martineau, Raymond, Klein, Andrew A., Djaiani, George, Shayan, Charles, Carroll, Jo, Chamchad, Dmitri, Fedorko, Ludwik, Cheng, Davy, Karski, Jacek, Keyvan, Karkouti, Bird, Sally J., Feldman, Liane S., Anidjar, Maurice, Stanbridge, Donna, Carli, Franco, Klein, Andrew, Karkouti, Keyvan, Abdelnaem, Esam, Wijeysundera, Duminda, Beattie, Scott, Yau, Terry, Sutton, David, Varadarajan, Bharathi, Klein, Andrew, Jose, Geraldine, Djaiani, George, Fedorko, Ludwik, Carroll, Jo, Karski, Jacek, Kakizawa, Karen, McCluskey, Stuart A., Karkouti, Keyvan, Ghannam, Mohammed, Smith, Robert, Goldman, Adam, Hsu, Janet, Abdelnaem, Esam, Duviner, Geoff, Sutton, David, Grant, David, Levy, Gary, Chamchad, Dmitri, Djaiani, George, Chang, Alvin, Karski, Jacek, Carroll, Jo, Shayan, Charles, Karkouti, Keyvan, Abdelnaem, Esam, Wijeysundera, Duminda, Borger, Michael, Djaiani, George, Ghannam, Mohammed, Morgan, Pamela J., Cleave-Hogg, Doreen, DeSousa, Susan, Tarshis, Jordan, Gvozdic, Branka, Hong, Xi, Schricker, Thomas, Carli, Franco, Radwan, Omar, Fried, Gerald, Carli, Franco, Gvozdic, Branka, Carli, Franco, Backman, Steven, Christou, Nicolas, Schricker, Thomas, Ghazar, Nancy, Morewood, Gordon H., Engen, Dale, Ashbury, Ted, VanDenKerkhof, Elizabeth G., Wang, Louie, Tarshis, Jordan, DeSousa, Susan, Brown, Russell, Iglesias, Stuart, Kohlhammer, Monica, Tanzola, Rob C., VanDenKerkhof, Elizabeth G., Milne, Brian, Doyle, D. John, Joo, Hwan, Frazer, Cassandra, Iacolucci, Anthony, Bagrin, Andrew, Small, Orville, Lewin, Warren, Chowet, Anne L., Lopez, Jaime R., Brock-Utne, John, Jaffe, Richard A., Milne, Andrew D., Muir, John G., Lee, J. Michael, English, Michael J. M., Hung, O. R., Tsui, Ban C. H., and Finucane, Brendan
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- 2003
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11. Robust closed-loop control of induction and maintenance of propofol anesthesia in children
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West, Nicholas, Dumont, Guy A., van Heusden, Klaske, Petersen, Christian L., Khosravi, Sara, Soltesz, Kristian, Umedaly, Aryannah, Reimer, Eleanor, and Ansermino, Mark J.
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- 2013
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12. A Pulsatile Pressure Waveform Is a Sensitive Marker for Confirming the Location of the Thoracic Epidural Space
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Lennox, Pamela H., Umedaly, Hamed S., Grant, Raymer P., White, S. Adrian, Fitzmaurice, Brett G., and Evans, Kenneth G.
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- 2006
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13. Chiari type I malformation and postoperative respiratory failure
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Williams, Daryl L., Umedaly, Hamed, Martin, I. Lynn, and Boulton, Anthony
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- 2000
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14. The GlideScope® Video Laryngoscope: randomized clinical trial in 200 patients
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Sun, D.A., Warriner, C.B., Parsons, D.G., Klein, R., Umedaly, H.S., and Moult, M.
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- 2005
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15. Effects of handling and short-term captivity : a multi-behaviour approach using red sea urchins, Mesocentrotus franciscanus
- Author
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Haley Robb, Faye Manning, Aari Umedaly, Natasha Ficzycz, Nikolaos Avrantinis, Isabelle M. Côté, Fiona T. Francis, Coralee Schmidt, Siobhan Gray, Aneesh P. H. Bose, Jonathan Fischer-Rush, Jeff Warden, Christine Spice, and Daniel Zayonc
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Relocation ,Captivity ,Zoology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Marine Biology ,Stress ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Predation ,Animal welfare ,biology.animal ,ddc:570 ,Ecosystem ,Invertebrate ,Sea urchin ,Animal Behavior ,Animal Welfare (journal) ,biology ,Echinoderm ,Reintroduction ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,General Neuroscience ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,Invertebrate, Reintroduction, Relocation, Echinoderm, Stress, Animal welfare ,biology.organism_classification ,Mesocentrotus franciscanus ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
Understanding the effects of captivity-induced stress on wild-caught animals after their release back into the wild is critical for the long-term success of relocation and reintroduction programs. To date, most of the research on captivity stress has focused on vertebrates, with far less attention paid to invertebrates. Here, we examine the effect of short-term captivity (i.e., up to four days) on self-righting, aggregation, and predator-escape behaviours in wild-caught red sea urchins, Mesocentrotus franciscanus, after their release back into the wild. Aggregation behaviour, which has been linked to feeding in sea urchins, was not affected by handling or captivity. In contrast, the sea urchins that had been handled and released immediately, as well as those that were handled and held captive, took longer to right themselves and were poorer at fleeing from predators than wild, unhandled sea urchins. These results indicate that handling rather than captivity impaired these behaviours in the short term. The duration of captivity did not influence the sea urchin behaviours examined. Longer-term monitoring is needed to establish what the fitness consequences of these short-term behavioural changes might be. Our study nevertheless highlights the importance of considering a suite of responses when examining the effects of capture and captivity. Our findings, which are based on a locally abundant species, can inform translocation efforts aimed at bolstering populations of ecologically similar but depleted invertebrate species to retain or restore important ecosystem functions.
- Published
- 2019
16. The Vancouver 3M (Multidisciplinary, Multimodality, But Minimalist) Clinical Pathway Facilitates Safe Next-Day Discharge Home at Low-, Medium-, and High-Volume Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Centers: The 3M TAVR Study
- Author
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David A, Wood, Sandra B, Lauck, John A, Cairns, Karin H, Humphries, Richard, Cook, Robert, Welsh, Jonathon, Leipsic, Philippe, Genereux, Robert, Moss, John, Jue, Philipp, Blanke, Anson, Cheung, Jian, Ye, Danny, Dvir, Hamed, Umedaly, Rael, Klein, Kevin, Rondi, Rohan, Poulter, Dion, Stub, Marco, Barbanti, Peter, Fahmy, Nay, Htun, Dale, Murdoch, Roshan, Prakash, Madeleine, Barker, Kevin, Nickel, Jay, Thakkar, Janarthanan, Sathananthan, Ben, Tyrell, Faisal, Al-Qoofi, James L, Velianou, Madhu K, Natarajan, Harindra C, Wijeysundera, Sam, Radhakrishnan, Eric, Horlick, Mark, Osten, Christopher, Buller, Mark, Peterson, Anita, Asgar, Donald, Palisaitis, Jean-Bernard, Masson, Susheel, Kodali, Tamim, Nazif, Vinod, Thourani, Vasilis C, Babaliaros, David J, Cohen, Julie E, Park, Martin B, Leon, and John G, Webb
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Male ,Canada ,Hospitals, Low-Volume ,Time Factors ,Punctures ,Prosthesis Design ,Patient Readmission ,Risk Assessment ,Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Catheterization, Peripheral ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Length of Stay ,Patient Discharge ,United States ,Femoral Artery ,Treatment Outcome ,Aortic Valve ,Heart Valve Prosthesis ,Critical Pathways ,Female ,Hospitals, High-Volume - Abstract
The authors sought to prospectively determine the safety and efficacy of next-day discharge using the Vancouver 3M (Multidisciplinary, Multimodality, but Minimalist) Clinical Pathway.Transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is an alternative to surgery in high- and intermediate-risk patients; however, hospital stays average at least 6 days in most trials. The Vancouver 3M Clinical Pathway is focused on next-day discharge, made possible by the use of objective screening criteria as well as streamlined peri- and post-procedural management guidelines.Patients were enrolled from 6 low-volume (100 TAVR/year), 4 medium-volume, and 3 high-volume (200 TAVR/year) centers in Canada and the United States. The primary outcomes were a composite of all-cause death or stroke by 30 days and the proportion of patients successfully discharged home the day following TAVR.Of 1,400 screened patients, 411 were enrolled at 13 centers and received a SAPIEN XT (58.2%) or SAPIEN 3 (41.8%) valve (Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, California). In centers enrolling exclusively in the study, 55% of screened patients were enrolled. The median age was 84 years (interquartile range: 78 to 87 years) with a median STS score of 4.9% (interquartile range: 3.3% to 6.8%). Next-day discharge home was achieved in 80.1% of patients, and within 48 h in 89.5%. The composite of all-cause mortality or stroke by 30 days occurred in 2.9% (95% confidence interval: 1.7% to 5.1%), with neither component of the primary outcome affected by hospital TAVR volume (p = 0.51). Secondary outcomes at 30 days included major vascular complication 2.4% (n = 10), readmission 9.2% (n = 36), cardiac readmission 5.7% (n = 22), new permanent pacemaker 5.7% (n = 23), andmild paravalvular regurgitation 3.8% (n = 15).Adherence to the Vancouver 3M Clinical Pathway at low-, medium-, and high-volume TAVR centers allows next-day discharge home with excellent safety and efficacy outcomes.
- Published
- 2018
17. Effects of handling and short-term captivity: a multi-behaviour approach using red sea urchins, Mesocentrotus franciscanus
- Author
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Bose, Aneesh P.H., primary, Zayonc, Daniel, additional, Avrantinis, Nikolaos, additional, Ficzycz, Natasha, additional, Fischer-Rush, Jonathan, additional, Francis, Fiona T., additional, Gray, Siobhan, additional, Manning, Faye, additional, Robb, Haley, additional, Schmidt, Coralee, additional, Spice, Christine, additional, Umedaly, Aari, additional, Warden, Jeff, additional, and Côté, Isabelle M., additional
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- 2019
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18. Palliation of a tracheobronchial adenoid cystic carcinoma using a Harrell Y Stent: The complex anesthetic considerations of a shared airway, a stenotic, necrotic tracheal lesion and bronchoscopic stent placement
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Peterson, Carly and Umedaly, Hamed
- Published
- 2008
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19. IMPACT OF LEVEL OF ANAESTHESIA USING THE VANCOUVER CLINICAL PATHWAY FOR TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT: INSIGHTS FROM THE 3M TAVR STUDY
- Author
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Sathananthan, J., primary, Webb, J., additional, Lauck, S., additional, Cairns, J., additional, Murdoch, D., additional, Cook, R., additional, Humphries, K., additional, Park, J., additional, Zhao, Y., additional, Welsh, R., additional, Leipsic, J., additional, Genereux, P., additional, Tyrrell, B., additional, Alqoofi, F., additional, Velianou, J., additional, Natarajan, M., additional, Wijeysundera, H., additional, Radhakrishnan, S., additional, Horlick, E., additional, Osten, M., additional, Asgar, A., additional, Kodali, S., additional, Nazif, T., additional, Thourani, V., additional, Babaliaros, V., additional, Cohen, D., additional, Masson, J., additional, Klein, R., additional, Rondi, K., additional, Umedaly, H., additional, Leon, M., additional, and Wood, D., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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20. A continuous perineural infusion of local anesthetic provides effective post-operative pain management after lower limb amputation
- Author
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Lennox, Pamela H., Winkelaar, Gerrit B., Umedaly, Hamed, and Hsiang, York N.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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21. Safety, constraints and anti-windup in closed-loop anesthesia
- Author
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Guy A. Dumont, Nicholas West, K. van Heusden, Richard N. Merchant, Aryannah Umedaly, and John Mark Ansermino
- Subjects
Patient safety ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Control theory ,Anesthesia ,Control (management) ,Mode (statistics) ,PID controller ,Control engineering ,Safety constraints ,business ,Anti windup ,Variety (cybernetics) - Abstract
Feasibility of closed-loop anesthesia has been shown in a number of clinical studies. Demonstration of patient safety will be essential to convince regulatory authorities of the benefits of such systems. This paper considers safety constraints for closed-loop propofol anesthesia based on its therapeutic range. Simulation scenarios are proposed for evaluation of control strategies in the presence of these constraints. The scenarios reproduce realistic situations encountered in clinical practice. Using the proposed scenarios, the performance of ℒ 2 anti-windup is compared to sliding mode reference conditioning and to back-calculation anti-windup. It is concluded that ℒ 2 anti-windup might not be appropriate for this problem. The sliding mode solution results in behaviour comparable to the Hanus conditioned controller and there seems to be no need for fast switching. The back-calculation anti-windup performs well in a variety of situations.
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- 2014
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22. Book reviews
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Hung, Orlando R., Vaghadia, Himat, Knight, Brian, and Umedaly, H.
- Published
- 1998
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23. Do-it-yourself modi.ed right-sided Broncho-Cath™ double lumen tube
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Lohser, Jens, Umedaly, Hamed S., and Fitzmaurice, Brett G.
- Published
- 2007
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24. IMPACT OF LEVEL OF ANAESTHESIA USING THE VANCOUVER CLINICAL PATHWAY FOR TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT: INSIGHTS FROM THE 3M TAVR STUDY
- Author
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Vinod H. Thourani, Sandra Lauck, David Cohen, Tamim Nazif, Yelin Zhao, Faisal Alqoofi, K. Rondi, Mark Osten, James L. Velianou, John G. Webb, Dale Murdoch, Philippe Généreux, J. Cairns, Eric Horlick, Julie E. Park, Susheel Kodali, David A. Wood, Janarthanan Sathananthan, Sam Radhakrishnan, Martin B. Leon, Benjamin Tyrrell, Richard J. Cook, R. Klein, Robert C. Welsh, Madhu K. Natarajan, Anita W. Asgar, Harindra C. Wijeysundera, Jean-Bernard Masson, H. Umedaly, Karin H. Humphries, V. Babaliaros, and Jonathan Leipsic
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical pathway ,Transcatheter aortic ,Valve replacement ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2018
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25. Cerebrospinal Fluid Inflammatory Cytokines and Biomarkers of Injury Severity in Acute Human Spinal Cord Injury
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Scott Paquette, Charles G. Fisher, Mitch Giffin, Donna Chan, Brian K. Kwon, Lise Belanger, Arlene Bernardo, A T Stammers, Gerard P. Slobogean, Carole M. Bishop, Michael Boyd, John Street, Marcel F. Dvorak, Hongbin Zhang, and Hamed Umedaly
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,tau Proteins ,Inflammation ,S100 Calcium Binding Protein beta Subunit ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Young Adult ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein ,medicine ,Humans ,Nerve Growth Factors ,Prospective Studies ,Spinal cord injury ,Chemokine CCL2 ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Trauma Severity Indices ,Glial fibrillary acidic protein ,biology ,Interleukin-6 ,business.industry ,Interleukin-8 ,S100 Proteins ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,Myelitis ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,Cytokine ,Spinal Cord ,Neuropathic pain ,biology.protein ,Cytokines ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Inflammation Mediators ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
There is an urgent need for both the scientific development and clinical validation of novel therapies for acute spinal cord injury (SCI). The scientific development of novel therapies would be facilitated by a better understanding of the acute pathophysiology of human SCI. Clinical validation of such therapies would be facilitated by the availability of biomarkers with which to stratify injury severity and predict neurological recovery. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples were obtained over a period of 72 h in 27 patients with complete SCI (ASIA A) or incomplete SCI (ASIA B or C). Cytokines were measured in CSF and serum samples using a multiplex cytokine array system and standard enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) techniques. Neurological recovery was monitored, and patient-reported neuropathic pain was documented. IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1, tau, S100beta, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) were elevated in a severity-dependent fashion. A biochemical model was established using S100beta, GFAP, and IL-8 to predict injury severity (ASIA A, B, or C). Using these protein concentrations at 24-h post injury, the model accurately predicted the observed ASIA grade in 89% of patients. Furthermore, segmental motor recovery at 6 months post injury was better predicted by these CSF proteins than with the patients' baseline ASIA grade. The pattern of expression over the first 3 to 4 days post injury of a number of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6, IL-8, and MCP-1 provides invaluable information about the pathophysiology of human SCI. A prediction model that could use such biological data to stratify injury severity and predict neurological outcome may be extremely useful for facilitating the clinical validation of novel treatments in acute human SCI.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Intrathecal pressure monitoring and cerebrospinal fluid drainage in acute spinal cord injury: a prospective randomized trial
- Author
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Michael A. Nikolakis, John A. Markez, Hamed Umedaly, Scott Paquette, Charles G. Fisher, Lise Belanger, Michael Boyd, Gerard P. Slobogean, Mitch Giffin, Stephen Gorelik, Donna Chan, John Street, Marcel F. Dvorak, Armin Curt, Arlene Bernardo, and Brian K. Kwon
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ischemia ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,Surgery ,Central nervous system disease ,Aortic aneurysm ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Blood pressure ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Paralysis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Spinal cord injury - Abstract
Object Ischemia is an important factor in the pathophysiology of secondary damage after traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) and, in the setting of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair, can be the primary cause of paralysis. Lowering the intrathecal pressure (ITP) by draining CSF is routinely done in thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm surgery but has not been evaluated in the setting of acute traumatic SCI. Additionally, while much attention is directed toward maintaining an adequate mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) in the acute postinjury phase, little is known about what is happening to the ITP during this period when spinal cord perfusion pressure (MABP − ITP) is important. The objectives of this study were to: 1) evaluate the safety and feasibility of draining CSF to lower ITP after acute traumatic SCI; 2) evaluate changes in ITP before and after surgical decompression; and 3) measure neurological recovery in relation to the drainage of CSF. Methods Twenty-two patients seen within 48 hours of injury were prospectively randomized to a drainage or no-drainage treatment group. In all cases a lumbar intrathecal catheter was inserted for 72 hours. Acute complications of headache/nausea/vomiting, meningitis, or neurological deterioration were carefully monitored. Acute Spinal Cord Injury motor scores were documented at baseline and at 6 months postinjury. Results On insertion of the catheter, mean ITP was 13.8 ± 1.3 mm Hg (± SD), and it increased to a mean peak of 21.7 ± 1.5 mm Hg intraoperatively. The difference between the starting ITP on catheter insertion and the observed peak intrathecal pressure after decompression was, on average, an increase of 7.9 ± 1.6 mm Hg (p < 0.0001, paired t-test). During the postoperative period, the peak recorded ITP in the patients randomized to the no-drainage group was 30.6 ± 2.3 mm Hg, which was significantly higher than the peak intraoperative ITP (p = 0.0098). During the same period, the peak recorded ITP in patients randomized to receive drainage was 28.1 ± 2.8 mm Hg, which was not statistically higher than the peak intraoperative ITP (p = 0.15). Conclusions The insertion of lumbar intrathecal catheters and the drainage of CSF were not associated with significant adverse events, although the cohort was small and only a limited amount of CSF was drained. Intraoperative decompression of the spinal cord results in an increase in the ITP measured caudal to the injury site. Increases in intrathecal pressure are additionally observed in the postoperative period. These increases in intrathecal pressure result in reduced spinal cord perfusion that will otherwise go undetected when measuring only the MABP. Characteristic changes in the observed intrathecal pressure waveform occur after surgical decompression, reflecting the restoration of CSF flow across the SCI site. As such, the waveform pattern may be used intraoperatively to determine if adequate decompression of the thecal sac has been accomplished.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Assessment of a Mobile Game ('MobileKids Monster Manor') to Promote Physical Activity Among Children
- Author
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J. Mark Ansermino, Guy A. Dumont, Aryannah Umedaly, Anne K. Junker, Leah Robertson, Jean-Pierre Chanoine, Ainara Garde, and S. Mazdak Abulnaga
- Subjects
Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Applied psychology ,Physical fitness ,Physical activity ,Fitness Trackers ,Health Promotion ,computer.software_genre ,Double-Blind Method ,Phone ,Software Design ,Intervention (counseling) ,Humans ,Child ,Exercise ,Internet ,Motivation ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Baseline data ,Computer Science Applications ,Activity monitor ,Video Games ,Mobile phone ,Female ,Sedentary Behavior ,Psychology ,business ,computer ,Cell Phone ,Monster - Abstract
The majority of children in North America are not meeting current physical activity guidelines. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a mobile phone game ("MobileKids Monster Manor") as a tool to promote voluntary physical activity among children.The game integrates data from an accelerometer-based activity monitor (Tractivity(®); Kineteks Corp., Vancouver, BC, Canada) wirelessly connected to a phone and was developed with the involvement of a team of young advisors (KidsCan Initiative: Involving Youth as Ambassadors for Research). Fifty-four children 8-13 years old completed a week of baseline data collection by wearing an accelerometer but receiving no feedback about their activity levels. The 54 children were then sequentially assigned to two groups: One group played "MobileKids Monster Manor," and the other received daily activity feedback (steps and active minutes) via an online program. The physical activity (baseline and intervention weeks) was measured using the activity monitor and compared using two-way repeated-measures analysis of variance (intervention×time).Forty-seven children with a body mass index (BMI) z-score of 0.35±1.18 successfully completed the study. Significant (P=0.01) increases in physical activity were observed during the intervention week in both the game and feedback groups (1191 and 796 steps/day, respectively). In the game group, greater physical activity was demonstrated in children with higher BMI z-score, showing 964 steps/day more per BMI z-score unit (P=0.03; 95 percent confidence interval of 98 to 1829).Further investigation is required to confirm that our game design promotes physical activity.
- Published
- 2015
28. Prospective Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing Patient-Controlled Intravenous Analgesia With Patient-Controlled Epidural Analgesia After Lumbar Spinal Fusion
- Author
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Jennifer Brown, Charles G. Fisher, Caroline Abramson, Hamed Umedaly, Vanessa K. Noonan, Edward G. Gofton, Marcel F. Dvorak, Peter C. Wing, and Lise Belanger
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Visual analogue scale ,Patient-controlled analgesia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Analgesic ,Surgery ,law.invention ,Clinical trial ,Patient satisfaction ,Randomized controlled trial ,Opioid ,law ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Study Design. A prospective, randomized, double-blind clinical trial was conducted. Objective. To compare the efficacy of patient-conitrolled analgesia (PCA) with that of patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) in terms of-overall patient satisfaction with postoperative pain -management after lumbar spine fusion. of Background -Data. in numerous surgical disciplines, PCEA and PCA have proved to be effective methods of postoperative pain control. The literature states that with PCEA, less opioid use is required during the immediate postoperative period to maintain equivalent -pain control compared to PCA. Continuous epidurat infusion has been assessed in spine fusion patients, but PCEA has not been evaluated. Furthermore, this- is the first prospective randomized clinical trial to assess overall patient-satisfaction while stratifying patients for both anx iety level and preoperative opioid use. Methods. For this study, 74 patients were assigned randomly to -one of two treatment groups, with PCA and PCEA administered in a double-blind manner for a 3-day postoperative course. All the patients. received both PCA and PCEA delivery systems. Assessment was by a blinded, independent observer. Overall patient satisfaction with pain management was assessed by a visual analog scale at the end of postoperative day 3. Secondary measures included: three scales from the Functional Independence - Measure instrument; opioid quantity; side effects; and length of hospital stay, Results. Thirty-eight patients worn randomized to PCA, and 36 were randomized. to PCEA. No baseline variable differences between the groups were observed. The results showed no difference between the groups on the following measures: overall patient satisfaction with pain management, ambulation, and length of stay. The PCA patients used significantly more opioid than the PCEA patients. Conclusions. Both postoperative analgesic regimens provided good overall patient satisfaction. The only clinical advantage of PCEA over PCA for spine fusion patients was the lower amount of opioid consumed, althouoh the PCEA group experienced significantly more side effects than the PCA group. There were no other significant differences. Therefore, patient or physician preference could select either postoperative pain management delivery system.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Evaluation of a Novel Mobile Exergame in a School-Based Environment
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Garde, Ainara, primary, Umedaly, Aryannah, additional, Abulnaga, Sayed Mazdak, additional, Junker, Anne, additional, Chanoine, Jean Pierre, additional, Johnson, Mika, additional, Ansermino, John Mark, additional, and Dumont, Guy Albert, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Preoperative Dextromethorphan Reduces Intraoperative but Not Postoperative Morphine Requirements After Laparotomy
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Michael J. Cousins, Michael Mersiades, Hamed S. Umedaly, Ian Power, Alexandra Zammit, Laurence E. Mather, and Robert F Grace
- Subjects
business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dextromethorphan ,Placebo ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Blood pressure ,Oral administration ,Laparotomy ,Anesthesia ,Heart rate ,Morphine ,medicine ,Intraoperative Period ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists combined with opioids are thought to be effective in the control of pain states. We evaluated morphine use and analgesia in 37 patients postlaparotomy. Patients received 60 mg of oral dextromethorphan or placebo the night before and again 1 h before surgery. Morphine was titrated intraoperatively to maintain blood pressure and heart rate within 20% of baseline and postoperatively via patient-controlled analgesia (PCA). The dextromethorphan and placebo groups were compared for morphine use intraoperatively, in recovery, via PCA in the first 4 and 24 h, and total use over the study period. Pain scores at rest and on activity for the first 4 and 24 h were also compared. Intraoperatively, the dextromethorphan group required less morphine: 13.1 +/- 4.3 vs 17.6 +/- 6.0 mg (P = 0.012). Postoperatively, there was no significant difference between the dextromethorphan and placebo groups for morphine use: in the recovery room 10.9 +/- 7.7 vs 12.1 +/- 7.7 mg; the first 4 h of PCA 15.9 +/- 9.3 vs 12.7 +/- 5.1 mg; the first 24 h of PCA 76.4 +/- 44.7 vs 61.8 +/- 27.5 mg; or in total morphine use 100.4 +/- 49.5 vs 91.5 +/- 33.1 mg. Pain scores for the two groups were not statistically different throughout the study period. We conclude that 60 mg of oral dextromethorphan given the night before and repeated an hour before surgery does not provide a postoperative morphine-sparing effect or improve analgesia after laparotomy. Implications: Patients given dextromethorphan before surgery had significantly reduced intraoperative morphine requirements. However, postoperative morphine requirements were unaltered. Dextromethorphan may need to be continued postoperatively to improve postoperative analgesia. (Anesth Analg 1998;87:1135-8)
- Published
- 1998
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- View/download PDF
31. Design and clinical evaluation of robust PID control of propofol anesthesia in children
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Nicholas West, Aryannah Umedaly, J. Mark Ansermino, Christian L. Petersen, Klaske van Heusden, Kristian Soltesz, and Guy A. Dumont
- Subjects
clinical trials ,business.industry ,PID controller ,Control Engineering ,anesthesia ,Clinical trial ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Control theory ,Robustness (computer science) ,PID control ,Breathing ,Medicine ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Robust control ,business ,Propofol ,Clinical evaluation ,robust control ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This paper describes the design of a robust proportional-integral derivative (PID) controller for propofol infusion in children and presents the results of clinical evaluation of this closed-loop system during endoscopic investigations in children age 6-17. The controller design is based on a set of models that describes the interpatient variability in the response to propofol infusion in the study population. The PID controller is tuned to achieve sufficient robustness margins for the identified uncertainty. 108 children were enrolled in this study, and anesthesia was closed-loop controlled in 102 of these cases. Clinical evaluation of the system shows that closed-loop control of both induction and maintenance of anesthesia in children based on the WAVCNS index as a measure of clinical effect is feasible. A robustly tuned PID controller can accommodate the interpatient variability in children and spontaneous breathing can be maintained in most subjects.
- Published
- 2014
32. Robust closed-loop control of induction and maintenance of propofol anesthesia in children
- Author
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Kristian Soltesz, Guy A. Dumont, Eleanor Reimer, Nicholas West, Aryannah Umedaly, Sara Khosravi, Klaske van Heusden, J. Mark Ansermino, and Christian L. Petersen
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lidocaine ,Adolescent ,Remifentanil ,Pain ,Injections ,Cohort Studies ,User-Computer Interface ,Bolus (medicine) ,Pharmacokinetics ,Interquartile range ,Monitoring, Intraoperative ,medicine ,pharmacodynamics ,intravenous agents ,Humans ,Child ,Propofol ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,Endoscopy ,Equipment Design ,Control Engineering ,general anesthesia ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Treatment Outcome ,Intravenous anesthesia ,Anesthesia ,Pharmacodynamics ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Anesthesia Recovery Period ,Anesthesia, Intravenous ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Female ,business ,Anesthesia, Inhalation ,pharmacokinetics ,Algorithms ,Anesthetics, Intravenous ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background During closed-loop control, a drug infusion is continually adjusted according to a measure of clinical effect (e.g., an electroencephalographic depth of hypnosis (DoH) index). Inconsistency in population-derived pediatric pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic models and the large interpatient variability observed in children suggest a role for closed-loop control in optimizing the administration of intravenous anesthesia. Objective To clinically evaluate a robustly tuned system for closed-loop control of the induction and maintenance of propofol anesthesia in children undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy. Methods One hundred and eight children, aged 6-17, ASA I-II, were enrolled. Prior to induction of anesthesia, NeuroSENSE™ sensors were applied to obtain the WAVCNS DoH index. An intravenous cannula was inserted and lidocaine (0.5 mg·kg(-1) ) administered. Remifentanil was administered as a bolus (0.5 μg·kg(-1) ), followed by continuous infusion (0.03 μg·kg(-1) ·min(-1) ). The propofol infusion was closed-loop controlled throughout induction and maintenance of anesthesia, using WAVCNS as feedback. Results Anesthesia was closed-loop controlled in 102 cases. The system achieved and maintained an adequate DoH without manual adjustment in 87/102 (85%) cases. Induction of anesthesia (to WAVCNS ≤ 60) was completed in median 3.8 min (interquartile range (IQR) 3.1-5.0), culminating in a propofol effect-site concentration (Ce ) of median 3.5 μg·ml(-1) (IQR 2.7-4.5). During maintenance of anesthesia, WAVCNS was measured within 10 units of the target for median 89% (IQR 79-96) of the time. Spontaneous breathing required no manual intervention in 91/102 (89%) cases. Conclusions A robust closed-loop system can provide effective propofol administration during induction and maintenance of anesthesia in children. Wide variation in the calculated Ce highlights the limitation of open-loop regimes based on pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic models.
- Published
- 2013
33. Clinical Evaluation of Closed-Loop Administration of Propofol Guided by the NeuroSENSE Monitor in Children
- Author
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Klaske van Heusden, Dumont, Guy A., Kristian Soltesz, Christian Petersen, Nicholas West, Aryannah Umedaly, and Mark Ansermino, J.
- Subjects
Anesthesiology and Intensive Care ,Control Engineering - Published
- 2012
34. Assessment of a Mobile Game (“MobileKids Monster Manor”) to Promote Physical Activity Among Children
- Author
-
Garde, Ainara, primary, Umedaly, Aryannah, additional, Abulnaga, S. Mazdak, additional, Robertson, Leah, additional, Junker, Anne, additional, Chanoine, Jean Pierre, additional, Ansermino, J. Mark, additional, and Dumont, Guy A., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Intrathecal pressure monitoring and cerebrospinal fluid drainage in acute spinal cord injury: a prospective randomized trial
- Author
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Brian K, Kwon, Armin, Curt, Lise M, Belanger, Arlene, Bernardo, Donna, Chan, John A, Markez, Stephen, Gorelik, Gerard P, Slobogean, Hamed, Umedaly, Mitch, Giffin, Michael A, Nikolakis, John, Street, Michael C, Boyd, Scott, Paquette, Charles G, Fisher, and Marcel F, Dvorak
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,Decompression, Surgical ,Thoracic Vertebrae ,Catheterization ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,Cerebrospinal Fluid Pressure ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Drainage ,Feasibility Studies ,Humans ,Female ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Aged - Abstract
Ischemia is an important factor in the pathophysiology of secondary damage after traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) and, in the setting of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair, can be the primary cause of paralysis. Lowering the intrathecal pressure (ITP) by draining CSF is routinely done in thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm surgery but has not been evaluated in the setting of acute traumatic SCI. Additionally, while much attention is directed toward maintaining an adequate mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) in the acute postinjury phase, little is known about what is happening to the ITP during this period when spinal cord perfusion pressure (MABP - ITP) is important. The objectives of this study were to: 1) evaluate the safety and feasibility of draining CSF to lower ITP after acute traumatic SCI; 2) evaluate changes in ITP before and after surgical decompression; and 3) measure neurological recovery in relation to the drainage of CSF.Twenty-two patients seen within 48 hours of injury were prospectively randomized to a drainage or no-drainage treatment group. In all cases a lumbar intrathecal catheter was inserted for 72 hours. Acute complications of headache/nausea/vomiting, meningitis, or neurological deterioration were carefully monitored. Acute Spinal Cord Injury motor scores were documented at baseline and at 6 months postinjury.On insertion of the catheter, mean ITP was 13.8 +/- 1.3 mm Hg (+/- SD), and it increased to a mean peak of 21.7 +/- 1.5 mm Hg intraoperatively. The difference between the starting ITP on catheter insertion and the observed peak intrathecal pressure after decompression was, on average, an increase of 7.9 +/- 1.6 mm Hg (p0.0001, paired t-test). During the postoperative period, the peak recorded ITP in the patients randomized to the no-drainage group was 30.6 +/- 2.3 mm Hg, which was significantly higher than the peak intraoperative ITP (p = 0.0098). During the same period, the peak recorded ITP in patients randomized to receive drainage was 28.1 +/- 2.8 mm Hg, which was not statistically higher than the peak intraoperative ITP (p = 0.15).The insertion of lumbar intrathecal catheters and the drainage of CSF were not associated with significant adverse events, although the cohort was small and only a limited amount of CSF was drained. Intraoperative decompression of the spinal cord results in an increase in the ITP measured caudal to the injury site. Increases in intrathecal pressure are additionally observed in the postoperative period. These increases in intrathecal pressure result in reduced spinal cord perfusion that will otherwise go undetected when measuring only the MABP. Characteristic changes in the observed intrathecal pressure waveform occur after surgical decompression, reflecting the restoration of CSF flow across the SCI site. As such, the waveform pattern may be used intraoperatively to determine if adequate decompression of the thecal sac has been accomplished.
- Published
- 2009
36. Intrathecal pressure monitoring and cerebrospinal fluid drainage in acute spinal cord injury: a prospective randomized trial
- Author
-
Kwon, B K, Curt, A, Belanger, L M, Bernardo, A, Chan, D, Markez, J A, Gorelik, S, Slobogean, G P, Umedaly, H, Giffin, M, Nikolakis, M A, Street, J, Boyd, M C, Paquette, S, Fisher, C G, Dvorak, M F, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
2728 Neurology (clinical) ,2808 Neurology ,610 Medicine & health ,10046 Balgrist University Hospital, Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Center ,2746 Surgery - Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Design and clinical evaluation of robust PID control of propofol anesthesia in children
- Author
-
van Heusden, Klaske, Dumont, Guy A., Soltesz, Kristian, Petersen, Christian L., Umedaly, Aryannah, West, Nicholas, Ansermino, J. Mark, van Heusden, Klaske, Dumont, Guy A., Soltesz, Kristian, Petersen, Christian L., Umedaly, Aryannah, West, Nicholas, and Ansermino, J. Mark
- Abstract
This paper describes the design of a robust PID controller for propofol infusion in children and presents the results of clinical evaluation of this closed-loop system during endoscopic investigations in children age 6y-17y. The controller design is based on a set of models that describes the inter- patient variability in the response to propofol infusion in the study population. The PID controller is tuned to achieve sufficient robustness margins for the identified uncertainty. 108 children were enrolled in the study, anesthesia was closed-loop controlled in 102 of these cases. Clinical evaluation of the system shows that closed-loop control of both induction and maintenance of anesthesia in children based on the WAVCNS index as a measure of clinical effect is feasible. A robustly tuned PID controller can accommodate the inter-patient variability in children and spontaneous breathing can be maintained in most subjects.
- Published
- 2014
38. Design and Clinical Evaluation of Robust PID Control of Propofol Anesthesia in Children
- Author
-
van Heusden, Klaske, primary, Dumont, Guy A., additional, Soltesz, Kristian, additional, Petersen, Christian L., additional, Umedaly, Aryannah, additional, West, Nicholas, additional, and Ansermino, J. Mark, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Prospective randomized clinical trial comparing patient-controlled intravenous analgesia with patient-controlled epidural analgesia after lumbar spinal fusion
- Author
-
Charles G, Fisher, Lise, Belanger, Edward G, Gofton, Hamed S, Umedaly, Vanessa K, Noonan, Caroline, Abramson, Peter C, Wing, Jennifer, Brown, and Marcel F, Dvorak
- Subjects
Male ,Narcotics ,Pain, Postoperative ,Drug Administration Routes ,Lumbosacral Region ,Analgesia, Patient-Controlled ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Analgesia, Epidural ,Spinal Fusion ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Patient Satisfaction ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Pain Measurement - Abstract
A prospective, randomized, double-blind clinical trial was conducted.To compare the efficacy of patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with that of patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) in terms of overall patient satisfaction with postoperative pain management after lumbar spine fusion.In numerous surgical disciplines, PCEA and PCA have proved to be effective methods of postoperative pain control. The literature states that with PCEA, less opioid use is required during the immediate postoperative period to maintain equivalent pain control compared to PCA. Continuous epidural infusion has been assessed in spine fusion patients, but PCEA has not been evaluated. Furthermore, this is the first prospective randomized clinical trial to assess overall patient satisfaction while stratifying patients for both anxiety level and preoperative opioid use.For this study, 74 patients were assigned randomly to one of two treatment groups, with PCA and PCEA administered in a double-blind manner for a 3-day postoperative course. All the patients received both PCA and PCEA delivery systems. Assessment was by a blinded, independent observer. Overall patient satisfaction with pain management was assessed by a visual analog scale at the end of postoperative day 3. Secondary measures included: three scales from the Functional Independence Measure instrument; opioid quantity; side effects; and length of hospital stay.Thirty-eight patients were randomized to PCA, and 36 were randomized to PCEA. No baseline variable differences between the groups were observed. The results showed no difference between the groups on the following measures: overall patient satisfaction with pain management, ambulation, and length of stay. The PCA patients used significantly more opioid than the PCEA patients.Both postoperative analgesic regimens provided good overall patient satisfaction. The only clinical advantage of PCEA over PCA for spine fusion patients was the lower amount of opioid consumed, although the PCEA group experienced significantly more side effects than the PCA group. There were no other significant differences. Therefore, patient or physician preference could select either postoperative pain management delivery system.
- Published
- 2003
40. 336 Safe, Next Day Discharge in High Risk Operable Patients Undergoing Contemporary Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
- Author
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M. Freeman, John Jue, Sandra Lauck, Stefan Toggweiler, Jian Ye, John G. Webb, R. Binder, I. Lim, Kenneth Gin, H. Umedaly, Anson Cheung, David A. Wood, Rohan Poulter, Richard J. Cook, and Jonathan Leipsic
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcatheter aortic ,Valve replacement ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Chiari type I malformation and postoperative respiratory failure
- Author
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Anthony Boulton, Hamed Umedaly, I. Lynn Martin, and D. L. Williams
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Craniofacial Abnormalities ,Intensive care ,Cerebellum ,Monitoring, Intraoperative ,Medicine ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Foramen Magnum ,Foramen magnum ,Fourth Ventricle ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Laminectomy ,Apnea ,General Medicine ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Respiration, Artificial ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pulmonary aspiration ,Respiratory failure ,Cranial Fossa, Posterior ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Blood Gas Analysis ,business ,Syringomyelia ,Craniotomy - Abstract
Purpose: To present a case of respiratory failure following suboccipital craniectomy for Chiari type I malformation. Clinical Features: A 22-yr-old man presented with a two year history of symptoms and signs suggestive of brainstem compression at the level of the foramen magnum. This was confirmed with magnetic resonance imaging. The procedure of suboccipital craniectomy, upper cervical laminectomy and fourth ventricle exploration was performed. Three hours postoperatively the patient experienced episodes of apnea and subsequently became drowsy. Blood gas analysis revealed hypercapnic respiratory failure. Chest X-ray revealed evidence of pulmonary aspiration. The trachea was re-intubated and the lungs ventilated in intensive care for 72 hr. He was discharged home two weeks postoperatively. Conclusion: Chiari type I malformation is associated with a number of associated anomalies. These patients are at considerable risk of respiratory depression and bulbar dysfunction in the perioperative period. The anesthetic issues are reviewed and discussed.
- Published
- 2001
42. Clinical Evaluation of Closed-Loop Administration of Propofol Guided by the NeuroSENSE Monitor in Children
- Author
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van Heusden, Klaske, Dumont, Guy A., Soltesz, Kristian, Petersen, Christian, West, Nicholas, Umedaly, Aryannah, Ansermino, J. Mark, van Heusden, Klaske, Dumont, Guy A., Soltesz, Kristian, Petersen, Christian, West, Nicholas, Umedaly, Aryannah, and Ansermino, J. Mark
- Published
- 2012
43. 196. Inflammatory Cytokine Expression and the Development of Injury Severity Biomarkers After Human Spinal Cord Injury
- Author
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Arlene Bernardo, Marcel F. Dvorak, Scott Paquette, Lise Belanger, Brian K. Kwon, Michael Boyd, Donna Chan, John Street, Charles G. Fisher, Mitch Giffin, A T Stammers, and Hamed Umedaly
- Subjects
business.industry ,Immunology ,Cytokine expression ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord injury - Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Preoperative dextromethorphan reduces intraoperative but not postoperative morphine requirements after laparotomy
- Author
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R F, Grace, I, Power, H, Umedaly, A, Zammit, M, Mersiades, M J, Cousins, and L E, Mather
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Laparotomy ,Pain, Postoperative ,Morphine ,Analgesia, Patient-Controlled ,Middle Aged ,Dextromethorphan ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Antitussive Agents ,Intraoperative Period ,Double-Blind Method ,Abdomen ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists combined with opioids are thought to be effective in the control of pain states. We evaluated morphine use and analgesia in 37 patients postlaparotomy. Patients received 60 mg of oral dextromethorphan or placebo the night before and again 1 h before surgery. Morphine was titrated intraoperatively to maintain blood pressure and heart rate within 20% of baseline and postoperatively via patient-controlled analgesia (PCA). The dextromethorphan and placebo groups were compared for morphine use intraoperatively, in recovery, via PCA in the first 4 and 24 h, and total use over the study period. Pain scores at rest and on activity for the first 4 and 24 h were also compared. Intraoperatively, the dextromethorphan group required less morphine: 13.1+/-4.3 vs 17.6+/-6.0 mg (P = 0.012). Postoperatively, there was no significant difference between the dextromethorphan and placebo groups for morphine use: in the recovery room 10.9+/-7.7 vs 12.1+/-7.7 mg; the first 4 h of PCA 15.9+/-9.3 vs 12.7+/-5.1 mg; the first 24 h of PCA 76.4+/-44.7 vs 61.8+/-27.5 mg; or in total morphine use 100.4+/-49.5 vs 91.5+/-3.1 mg. Pain scores for the two groups were not statistically different throughout the study period. We conclude that 60 mg of oral dextromethorphan given the night before and repeated an hour before surgery does not provide a postoperative morphine-sparing effect or improve analgesia after laparotomy.Patients given dextromethorphan before surgery had significantly reduced intraoperative morphine requirements. However, postoperative morphine requirements were unaltered. Dextromethorphan may need to be continued postoperatively to improve postoperative analgesia.
- Published
- 1998
45. A Multidisciplinary, Multimodality But Minimalist (3M) Approach to Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Facilitates Safe Next Day Discharge in High Risk Patients
- Author
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Wood, D.A., primary, Poulter, R., additional, Cook, R., additional, Lim, I., additional, Leipsic, J., additional, Ye, J., additional, Cheung, A., additional, Bogale, N., additional, Binder, R., additional, Toggweiler, S., additional, Freeman, M., additional, Barbanti, M., additional, Dvir, D., additional, Tan, J., additional, Lempereur, M., additional, Shiekh, I., additional, Jue, J., additional, Gin, K., additional, Lee, P., additional, Nair, P., additional, Tsang, T., additional, Choy, P., additional, Umedaly, H., additional, Lauck, S., additional, and Webb, J.G., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A Multidisciplinary, Multimodality But Minimalist (3M) Approach to Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Facilitates Safe Next Day Discharge in High Risk Patients
- Author
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Jonathan Leipsic, John Jue, Jian Ye, Parameswaran Nair, Nigussie Bogale, John G. Webb, Rohan Poulter, Stefan Toggweiler, D. Dvir, P. Lee, I. Lim, R. Binder, Marco Barbanti, Anson Cheung, M. Freeman, Teresa S.M. Tsang, David A. Wood, I. Shiekh, Mathieu Lempereur, P. Choy, Richard J. Cook, John Tan, Sandra Lauck, Kenneth Gin, and H. Umedaly
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,High risk patients ,Valve replacement ,Transcatheter aortic ,Multidisciplinary approach ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Surgery ,Multimodality - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Postoperative pain management in the neurosurgical patient
- Author
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Michael J. Cousins and Hamed S. Umedaly
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pain, Postoperative ,biology ,business.industry ,Excitatory amino-acid transporter ,Postoperative pain ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Neurosurgery ,Perioperative ,Pain management ,Clinical Practice ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Remifentanil ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Neurosurgical patient ,Patient satisfaction ,Piperidines ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,Humans ,Analgesia ,business ,Intensive care medicine - Abstract
We hope to have inspired an interest in approaching the pain management issues in this challenging group of patients. Despite significant progress in understanding the pathophysiology of pain, the development of therapeutic options, and the publication and dissemination of guidelines, this progress does not seem to have been adopted into clinical practice. Bonica has stated "for many years I have studied the reasons for inadequate management of postoperative pain, and they remain the same.... Inadequate or improper application of available information and therapies is certainly the most important reason". Let us accept the challenge to re-evaluate pain management in the postoperative neurosurgical patient. Future development may provide enhanced multimodal analgesia with the development of enantioselective NSAIDs and peripherally acting opioids that do not cross the blood-brain barrier. Targeted inhibition of the central neuroplasticity that underlies sensitization, rather than attempts to use pre-emptive analgesics, may be more fruitful. Inhibition of excitatory amino acids may prove beneficial for perioperative neuroprotection and pain management. In addition, longer-acting local anesthetics show significant promise. The importance of understanding the specific benefits available and matching these characteristics to the particular patient is emphasized. Evaluation of outcomes, including morbidity and patient satisfaction, will determine if effective and rational provision of analgesia may indeed be safer than withholding analgesia. However, it is clear that re-evaluation and refinement of conventional therapy is necessary.
- Published
- 1996
48. 336 Safe, Next Day Discharge in High Risk Operable Patients Undergoing Contemporary Transfemoral Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
- Author
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Wood, D.A., primary, Poulter, R.S., additional, Cook, R., additional, Lauck, S., additional, Leipsic, J., additional, Ye, J., additional, Cheung, A., additional, Toggweiler, S., additional, Binder, R., additional, Freeman, M., additional, Lim, I., additional, Jue, J., additional, Gin, K., additional, Umedaly, H., additional, and Webb, J., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Cerebrospinal Fluid Inflammatory Cytokines and Biomarkers of Injury Severity in Acute Human Spinal Cord Injury
- Author
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Kwon, Brian K., primary, Stammers, Anthea M.T., additional, Belanger, Lise M., additional, Bernardo, Arlene, additional, Chan, Donna, additional, Bishop, Carole M., additional, Slobogean, Gerard P., additional, Zhang, Hongbin, additional, Umedaly, Hamed, additional, Giffin, Mitch, additional, Street, John, additional, Boyd, Michael C., additional, Paquette, Scott J., additional, Fisher, Charles G., additional, and Dvorak, Marcel F., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Intrathecal pressure monitoring and cerebrospinal fluid drainage in acute spinal cord injury: a prospective randomized trial
- Author
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Kwon, Brian K., primary, Curt, Armin, additional, Belanger, Lise M., additional, Bernardo, Arlene, additional, Chan, Donna, additional, Markez, John A., additional, Gorelik, Stephen, additional, Slobogean, Gerard P., additional, Umedaly, Hamed, additional, Giffin, Mitch, additional, Nikolakis, Michael A., additional, Street, John, additional, Boyd, Michael C., additional, Paquette, Scott, additional, Fisher, Charles G., additional, and Dvorak, Marcel F., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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