Cardiopulmonary transplantation and mechanical circulatory support electronic
Cardiopulmonary transplantation & mechanical circulatory support
edited by Maziar Khorsandi
- First Edition
- 521 p some black and white
- Oxford medicine online .
- Oxford Academic .
Includes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents: Contributors - Abbreviations - Section 1Heart failure - 1. edical and minimally invasive aspects of heart failure management - Marc D. Samsky and Joseph G. Rogers - 2. yocarditis: diagnosis and treatment - Stuart D. Russell - 3. ardiac amyloidosis and other restrictive myopathies: diagnosis and treatment - Rahul Loungani and Chetan Patel - Section 2Mechanical circulatory support - 4. ndications for ventricular assist devices - Antonios Kourliouros - 5. urgical techniques for left ventricular assist device implantation and associated procedures - Igor Gosev and Scott Silvestry - 6. linical trials with durable left ventricular assist devices - Yuting P. Chiang and Mani A. Daneshmand - 7. iagnosis and management of ventricular assist device complications - Maziar Khorsandi, Philip Curry, Sukumaran Nair, and Nawwar Al-Attar - 8. xtracorporeal membrane oxygenation - Jeffrey Javidfar, Maziar Khorsandi, and Mani A. Daneshmand - 9. ercutaneous mechanical circulatory support - Dominick Megna Jr, Maziar Khorsandi, and Danny Ramzy - 10. he total artificial heart - Dominick Megna Jr and Francisco Arabia - 11. ost-cardiac surgery cardiogenic shock - Maziar Khorsandi, Philip Curry, Nawwar Al-Attar, and Sukumaran Nair - Section 3Heart transplantation - 12. atient selection criteria and bridging support for cardiac transplantation - Julie Doberne, Benjamin Bryner, and Chetan Patel - 13. ardiac donor selection and management - Ahmed S. Al-Adhami, Hari Doshi, Nawwar Al-Attar, and Philip Curry - 14. xtended criteria heart donors and perfusion storage - Yaron Barac, Anthony Castleberry, Jacob Schroder, and Sebastian V. Rojas - 15. onor heart procurement: donation after brain death and donation after circulatory determined death - Simon Messer, Stephen Large, Marius Berman, and Steven Tsui - 16. echnical aspects of heart transplantation - Yaron Barac, Christopher White, and Jacob Schroder - 17. ritical care management and primary graft dysfunction following cardiac transplantation - Sanjeet A. Singh, Jonathan R. Dalzell, Sukumaran Nair, and Andrew Sinclair - 18. ssessment and management of chronic complications following heart transplantation - Anna K. Barton, Alison I. Smyth, Alan J. Kirk, and Jonathan R. Dalzell - 19. edside care and rehabilitation with mechanical circulatory support and thoracic transplantation - Desiree Bonadonna, Lynn McGugan, and Evelyn Watson - 20. anagement of rejection following cardiac transplantation - Sounok Sen and Adam D. DeVore - 21. ntimicrobial prophylaxis and treatment of infection after cardiac transplantation - Sana Arif, Sylvia Costa, and Barbara D. Alexander - Section 4Heart failure in paediatric patients - 22. 1Heart transplant for paediatric patients - Mohamed Nassar and Asif Hasan - 22. 2Paediatric extracorporeal membrane oxygenation - Louise Kenny, Ed Peng, and Asif Hasan - 22. 3Paediatric heart transplant: specific considerations - Ed Peng and Asif Hasan - Section 5Special considerations in heart transplantation - 23. dult patients with congenital heart disease - Louise Kenny and Asif Hasan - Section 6Lung transplantation - 24. atient selection criteria and bridging support for lung transplantation - Basil Nasir and John M. Reynolds - 25. ung donor selection and management - Stephen C. Clark - 26. ung procurement following donation after brain death and donation after circulatory death - Julie Doberne, Jacob Klapper, and Matthew Hartwig - 27. x vivo lung perfusion - Anders Andreasson, Karen Booth, John Dark, and Abbas Ardehali - 28. echnical aspects of lung transplantation - Basil Nasir, Pedro Catarino, and John Haney - 29. ritical care management and primary graft dysfunction following lung transplantation - Michael Mulvihill, Nathan Waldron, and Matthew Hartwig - 30. anagement of rejection following lung transplantation - Lorenzo Zaffiri and Arun Nair - 31. ate complications following lung transplantation - Yejide Odedina, Jagan Murugachandran, and Jasvir Parmar - 32. ntimicrobial prophylaxis and treatment after lung transplantation - Karen Booth and Julie R. Samuel - Section 7Combined transplantation - 33. ombined heart-lung transplantation - Jason Ali, Jasvir Parmar, and Steven Tsui - 34. ombined thoracoabdominal organ transplantation - Yaron Barac, Jigesh A. Shah, Jacob Schroder, and Andrew S. Barbas - Section 8Anaesthetic considerations - 35. naesthetic issues related to extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and ventricular assist device procedures - Michael W. Manning and Kamrouz Ghadimi - 36. naesthetic issues related to heart transplantation - Philip McCall, Alina Nicoara, and Andrew Sinclair - 37. naesthetic issues related to lung transplantation - Brandi Bottiger, Nazish Hashmi, and Mihai Podgoreanu - Index
Heart failure and end stage lung disease are some of the most common causes of mortality in the western world. Heart and lung transplantation remain the gold standard in the management of these morbid conditions. However, these treatments are extremely resource intensive and require expertise with most up to date knowledge. This specialist handbook covers subjects such as; diagnosis and treatment of heart failure, mechanical circulatory support, heart transplantation, extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation and lung transplantation. There are also separate chapters on congenital and paediatric heart failure and transplantation. This handbook combines practical anecdotes from highly experienced and revered authors and editors from Europe and North America, with the most recent evidence, and produces a concise, quick reference guide for the practitioners on the front line. It is worth acknowledging that there remains significant variation in clinical practice from region to region and between different countries. Undoubtedly, much of what remains in routine practice in the field of cardiopulmonary transplantation and mechanical circulatory support is derived from anecdote and based on observational studies, and high-level evidence in certain areas of our speciality remains limited. Hence, the subjects and techniques described in this handbook are not exhaustive and only reflect the experience of the authors and editors of this handbook. I sincerely hope that readers enjoy using this handbook.
9780191959677
Heart transplantation--mechanical circulatory support