14 May 2012

Central Venous Pressure



Central Venous Catheterization
http://www.med.unc.edu/emergmed/files/Central_Venous_Catheterization.ppt

Central Venous Pressure Monitoring
Dr. Aidah Abu Elsoud Alkaissi
Central Venous Pressure Monitoring.ppt

Circulation
circall.ppt

Critical Care Nursing
Debbie L. Dempel
CriticalCare.ppt

Infusion Therapy
Infusion Therapy.ppt

Human Patient Simulator for CV Physiology
Tammy Euliano, MD
Human Patient Simulator for CV Physiology.ppt

Cardiogenic Shock and Hemodynamics
Cardiogenic_Shock.ppt

Hemodynamic Monitoring
Hemodynamic_Monitoring.ppt

Blood Vessels
bp and vessels.ppt

Venous Air Embolism
Pekka Talke, MD
Venous Air Embolism.PPT

Pulmonary Artery Catheter
Marie Sankaran Raval M.D.
Pulmonary Artery Catheter.ppt

Stab Wound to the Chest: Cardiac Tamponade
Mary C. McCarthy, MD FACS
penetratingcardiactamponade.pps

Esophagogastric Fundoplasty
Natalya Hasan, MD
Esophagogastric Fundoplasty.ppt

Shock in the Newborn
LEVIN
Shockinthenewborn.ppt

Cardiovascular system: Blood vessels, blood flow, blood pressure
Blood vessels, blood flow, blood pressure.ppt

Venous Tone and Venous ReturnLouis
D’Alecy, Ph.D
VenousReturn.ppt
81 free full text articles


  1. Central venous pressure and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure: fresh clinical perspectives from a new model of discordant and concordant heart failure.
  2. External jugular venous pressure as an alternative to conventional central venous pressure in right lobe donor hepatectomies.
  3. Comparison of the central venous pressure from internal jugular vein and the pressure measured from the peripherally inserted antecubital central catheter (PICCP) in liver transplantation recipients.
  4. Heat-stress-induced changes in central venous pressure do not explain interindividual differences in orthostatic tolerance during heat stress.
  5. Usefulness of respiratory variation of inferior vena cava diameter for estimation of elevated central venous pressure in children with cardiovascular disease.
  6. Peripheral venous pressure as an alternative to central venous pressure in patients undergoing laparoscopic colorectal surgery.
  7. Volume assessment in mechanically ventilated critical care patients using bioimpedance vectorial analysis, brain natriuretic Peptide, and central venous pressure.
  8. Central venous pressure during the post-anhepatic phase is not associated with early postoperative outcomes following orthotopic liver transplantation.
  9. Ultrasound accurately reflects the jugular venous examination but underestimates central venous pressure.
  10. Central venous pressure in clinical care algorithms: are anesthesiologists and intensivists ready?
  11. What is the preferred central venous pressure zero reference for hepatic resection?
  12. Retrieval of Dislodged Central Venous Pressure Catheters: Early experience with three case presentations.
  13. Non-invasive method for the rapid assessment of central venous pressure: description and validation by a single examiner.
  14. No decrease in central venous pressure when epinephrine-induced hypotension occurs.
  15. Mini-epidemic of erroneous central venous pressure measurements resulting from the malproduction of a specific part of a pressure transducer system.
  16. Using a central venous pressure guidewire and suction catheter to facilitate oral to nasal tracheal tube change in a child with a difficult airway.
  17. Error in central venous pressure measurement.
  18. Central venous pressure in femoral catheter: correlation with superior approach after heart surgery.
  19. Increased central venous pressure is associated with impaired renal function and mortality in a broad spectrum of patients with cardiovascular disease.
  20. Central venous pressure as popular resuscitation surrogate: not totally unjustified.
  21. Does central venous pressure predict fluid responsiveness?
  22. The intrathoracic blood volume index as an indicator of fluid responsiveness in critically ill patients with acute circulatory failure: a comparison with central venous pressure.
  23. Does central venous pressure predict fluid responsiveness? A systematic review of the literature and the tale of seven mares.
  24. Venous function and central venous pressure: a physiologic story.
  25. Can peripheral venous pressure be an alternative to central venous pressure during right hepatectomy in living donors?
  26. Uppermost blood levels of the right and left atria in the supine position: implication for measuring central venous pressure and pulmonary artery wedge pressure.
  27. Central venous pressure monitoring during living right donor hepatectomy.
  28. Near-fatal ventricular arrhythmias because of central venous pressure catheter tip migration during laparoscopic hemicolectomy.
  29. Usefulness of the external jugular vein examination in detecting abnormal central venous pressure in critically ill patients.
  30. Variability in the establishment of an external reference point for central venous pressure measurement in children.
  31. Comment on "Effect of low central venous pressure and phlebotomy on blood product transfusion requirements during liver transplantation".
  32. Low central venous pressure reduces blood loss in hepatectomy.
  33. Effect of low central venous pressure and phlebotomy on blood product transfusion requirements during liver transplantations.
  34. Effect of skin surface cooling on central venous pressure during orthostatic challenge.
  35. Effect of autologous blood donation on the central venous pressure, blood loss and blood transfusion during living donor left hepatectomy.
  36. Human cerebral venous outflow pathway depends on posture and central venous pressure.
  37. Influence of increased central venous pressure on baroreflex control of sympathetic activity in humans.
  38. Is the central venous pressure reading equally reliable if the central line is inserted via the femoral vein.
  39. Doppler echocardiography in non-invasive evaluation of central venous pressure.
  40. Non-invasive evaluation of central venous pressure by echocardiography.
  41. Central venous pressure monitoring during bypass.
  42. Effect of increasing central venous pressure during passive heating on skin blood flow.
  43. Pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect: a case for central venous pressure and oxygen saturation monitoring.
  44. Central venous pressure and cardiac function during spaceflight.
  45. Units of measurement of central venous pressure.
  46. Central venous pressure in space.
  47. Central venous pressure in the ventilated neonate.
  48. Measurement of central venous pressure.
  49. Influence of posture and reference point on central venous pressure measurement.
  50. Noninvasive measurement of central venous pressure by neck inductive plethysmography.
  51. Phlebotomy reverses the hemodynamic consequences of thoracic aortic cross-clamping: relationships between central venous pressure and cerebrospinal fluid pressure.
  52. Relation between sympathetic outflow and vascular resistance in the calf during perturbations in central venous pressure. Evidence for cardiopulmonary afferent regulation of calf vascular resistance in humans.
  53. Central venous pressure monitoring during cesarean section.
  54. Prospective evaluation of central venous pressure (CVP) catheters in a large city-county hospital.
  55. Continual monitoring of intraocular pressure: effect of central venous pressure, respiration, and eye movements on continual recordings of intraocular pressure in the rabbit, dog, and man.
  56. Optimal placement of a central venous pressure catheter before cardiopulmonary bypass.
  57. Superior vena cava syndrome due to a retained central venous pressure catheter.
  58. Unsuspected cerebral perfusion. A complication of the use of a central venous pressure catheter.
  59. Letter: A continuous indicator of the zero level of central venous pressure.
  60. Central venous pressure monitoring--a simple device to determine zero level.
  61. Effect on blood volume of maintaining a high central venous pressure after major aortic valve surgery.
  62. Reliability of central venous pressure as a measure of changes in left sided intracardiac pressures.
  63. Location of catheter tip and its impact on central venous pressure.
  64. Central venous pressure monitoring: misinterpretation, abuses, indications and a new technic.
  65. Percutaneous placement of catheters to monitor "central venous pressure".
  66. Traction-induced fracture of a central venous pressure catheter.
  67. Central venous pressure and intracranial pressure measurements using hypertonic fructose solution at differing PCO2 levels.
  68. Reliability of central venous pressure as an indicator of left atrial pressure. A study in patients with mitral valve disease.
  69. Central venous pressure monitoring.
  70. The value of chest radiography in the localization of central venous pressure catheters.
  71. The significance of central venous pressure and cardiac output measurements in shock.
  72. "Normal central venous pressure," significance of reference point and normal range.
  73. Central venous pressure and cardiac output during exercise in coronary artery disease.
  74. Guiding volume repletion in patients in shock by observation of central venous pressure.
  75. The use of central venous pressure as a guide to volume replacement in shock.
  76. The role of the central venous pressure determination in the management of the surgical patient.
  77. Effects of atropine and isoproterenol on cardiac output, central venous pressure, and mean transit time of indicators placed at three different sites in the venous system.
  78. Changes in transmural central venous pressure in man during hyperventilation.
  79. Changes in central venous pressure after moderate hemorrhage and transfusion in man.
  80. The continuous recording of central venous pressure changes from an arm vein.
  81. Central venous pressure in relation to cardiac "competence," blood volume and exercise.

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