نتایج جستجو برای: waste anesthetic gas

تعداد نتایج: 339003  

Journal: :iranian journal of public health 0
s asefzadeh ar raeisi a mousavi

background: the aim of this study was assessment the risk management status of waste anesthetic gases in academicals hospitals in iran to prevent from harmful effects of these gases on employees' health. methods: a descriptive-analytic study was designed in 2011. standard structured checklist developed by ecri institute (emergency care research institute) was applied. checklists were filled ons...

Journal: :Canadian family physician Medecin de famille canadien 2000
S Shuhaiber G Koren

QUESTION Two of my pregnant patients are exposed to inhaled anesthetic on the job. One is an anesthetist, and the other is a veterinarian. They have both expressed concern about this exposure. How should I advise them? ANSWER Occupational exposure to waste anesthetic gas is not associated with increased risk of major malformations. Risk of spontaneous abortion might be slightly increased, how...

Journal: :Mayo Clinic proceedings 2000
D G McGregor

The relationship between exposure to trace concentrations of waste anesthetic gases in the operating room and the possible development of adverse health effects has concerned health care professionals for numerous years. Results of studies have been conflicting. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, some US and European epidemiological studies of operating room personnel showed an increase in the ...

Journal: :Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science : JAALAS 2015
Frederick W Damen Amelia R Adelsperger Katherine E Wilson Craig J Goergen

Recent efforts have focused on mitigating anesthetic gas emissions during laboratory animal experiments. A recently developed, digitally controlled, integrated digital vaporizer (IDV) using a syringe pump has been designed to use and administer anesthetic gas to mice and rats more efficiently. The entire IDV system can be placed on a laboratory bench, requires fewer charcoal filters to act as p...

Journal: :Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie 2016

Journal: :The journal of extra-corporeal technology 1996
M Homishak S Widmer R Stauffer

Concerns remain about the acute and chronic effects on personnel of waste anesthetic gases in the operating room environment. This study demonstrates a simple and effective means of scavenging waste anesthetic gases when halogenated anesthetics are administered through the pump oxygenator during cardiopulmonary bypass. This technique safeguards workers' health by reducing ambient anesthetic lev...

Journal: :Anesthesiology 1999
C Byhahn C K Westphal

BACKGROUND To reduce the ambient concentration of waste anesthetic agents, exhaust gas scavenging systems are standard in almost all operating rooms. The incidence of contamination and the factors that may increase the concentrations of ambient anesthetic gases have not been evaluated fully during routine circumstances, however. METHODS Concentrations of nitrous oxide (N2O) in ambient air wer...

Journal: :AANA journal 2006
Joy C Barberio Jason D Bolt Paul N Austin William J Craig

Long-term exposure to waste anesthetic gas (WAG) may lead to health problems. The purpose of this study was to compare WAG concentrations resulting from 4 combinations of fresh gas flow (FGF) and vaporizer settings during a simulated intravenous induction in which the anesthetic is deepened using a volatile anesthetic delivered via mask ventilation before intubation. By using a lung model, WAG ...

2017
Mukul Chandra Kapoor

391 The ecological footprint of healthcare is enormous.[1] Almost 10% of the United States’ greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are contributed by healthcare.[2,3] More than a third of all hospital waste are generated during the perioperative period and surgical care. Inhaled anesthetics account for 2.5% of the GHG emissions attributed to the National Health Service of the United Kingdom.[1] In 2014...

Journal: :Anesthesia and analgesia 2013
Isaac Luria Samsun Lampotang Wilhelm Schwab Lou Ann Cooper David Lizdas Nikolaus Gravenstein

BACKGROUND The Low Flow Wizard (LFW) provides real-time guidance for user optimization of fresh gas flow (FGF) settings during general inhaled anesthesia. The LFW can continuously inform users whether it determines their FGF to be too little, efficient, or too much, and its color-coded recommendations respond in real time to changes in FGF performed by users. Our study objective was to determin...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید