8,434 research outputs found

    Mechanism of action of the anesthetic agents.

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    38.Meerts CH, Absalom AR. Anxiolytics, sedatives and hypnotics. Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine 2013;14:355-6039.Peeters MAG, Absalom AR. Spinal trauma. Anesthesia and Intensive Care. 2012; 4(1): 16 - 2

    Werking van inhalatie anesthetica.

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    38.Meerts CH, Absalom AR. Anxiolytics, sedatives and hypnotics. Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine 2013;14:355-6039.Peeters MAG, Absalom AR. Spinal trauma. Anesthesia and Intensive Care. 2012; 4(1): 16 - 2

    Safety, Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics of ABP-700: A Novel Intravenous Anesthetic

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    eter Meyer, M.D., Steven P. Sweeney, B.Sc., Izaak den Daas, Ph.D., Jason Campagna, M.D.,Ph.D., Kevin Pojasek, Ph.D., David Grayzel, M.D., Anthony R. Absalom, M.D., Michel M. Struys, M.D.,Ph.D

    Mechanism of action of the anesthetic agents.

    No full text
    38.Meerts CH, Absalom AR. Anxiolytics, sedatives and hypnotics. Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine 2013;14:355-6039.Peeters MAG, Absalom AR. Spinal trauma. Anesthesia and Intensive Care. 2012; 4(1): 16 - 2

    Mechanism of action of the anesthetic agents.

    No full text
    38.Meerts CH, Absalom AR. Anxiolytics, sedatives and hypnotics. Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine 2013;14:355-6039.Peeters MAG, Absalom AR. Spinal trauma. Anesthesia and Intensive Care. 2012; 4(1): 16 - 2

    Interview with Anthony F. Janson

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    Anthony F. Janson is a retired professor and former Department Chair for the UNCW Department of Art and Theatre [retired December 2002]. This interview covers his complete life and career. He discusses his relationship with his art historian father, H.W. Janson, including his relationship as son and co-author and editor of the Janson texts on art history. The interview covers Tony's career as a scholar, book editor, author, art museum curator [at Indianapolis Art Museum and North Carolina Art Museum], and as a professor. Throughout, he comments on important artists in history and his philosophy of art history. He also includes stories of his time in the Vietnam War

    Interview with Anthony F. Janson

    No full text
    Anthony F. Janson is a retired professor and former Department Chair for the UNCW Department of Art and Theatre [retired December 2002]. This interview covers his complete life and career. He discusses his relationship with his art historian father, H.W. Janson, including his relationship as son and co-author and editor of the Janson texts on art history. The interview covers Tony's career as a scholar, book editor, author, art museum curator [at Indianapolis Art Museum and North Carolina Art Museum], and as a professor. Throughout, he comments on important artists in history and his philosophy of art history. He also includes stories of his time in the Vietnam War

    Anthony Benezet

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    This chapter examines the global impact of Anthony Benezet's antislavery ministry, including Benezet's influence on black abolitionists outside the Society of Friends. More than any other individual's work in the eighteenth century, that of Benezet served as a catalyst, throughout the Atlantic world, for the initial organized fight against slave trade and the eventual ending of slavery. His written work, which combined Quaker principles and Enlightenment thinking with knowledge gained through a deep study of Africa and her history, and his own contacts with black people as a teacher and philanthropist influenced men from Benjamin Franklin to John Jay and Patrick Henry in North America; from Thomas Clarkson, Granville Sharp, and William Wilberforce in England; to Condorcet and the Abbé Raynal in France. His words helped inspire African-born Olaudah Equiano and Ottabah Cugoano to write, and students at his Quaker schools such as American-born blacks Richard Allen and Absalom Jones to organize.</p

    Intramuscular tranexamic acid: a real-world application of pharmacokinetics

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    For many anaesthetists around the world, the mere mention of the word ‘pharmacokinetics’ is sufficient to make their eyes glaze over and their attention wander. Pharmacokinetics is seen as an art that is as obscure and esoteric as the art of divination (prediction) practiced by the likes of Professor Sybille Trelawny 1 but that has varying and mostly limited relevance to clinical practice. Although this hyperbole may have elements of truth, it is a fact that pharmacokinetic data are the essential foundation upon which rational drug dosing guidelines are developed for all drugs
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