2020
Research Protocol and Case Report of Emergency Department Endovascular Aortic Occlusion (REBOA) in Non-traumatic Cardiac Arrest
Daley J, Cannon K, Buckley R, Aydin A, Latich I, Perez Lozada J, Bonz J, Joseph D, Coughlin R, Belsky J, Sather J, Wira C, Liu R, Johnson A, Moore C. Research Protocol and Case Report of Emergency Department Endovascular Aortic Occlusion (REBOA) in Non-traumatic Cardiac Arrest. Journal Of Endovascular Resuscitation And Trauma Management 2020, 4 DOI: 10.26676/jevtm.v40i(2).140.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMean arterial pressureEmergency departmentEmergency physiciansAortic occlusionCardiac arrestCase reportResearch protocolNon-traumatic cardiac arrestFeasibility of REBOAFavorable neurologic outcomeInitial casesNon-traumatic OHCAFemoral arterial accessHospital cardiac arrestTidal carbon dioxideEndovascular aortic occlusionEarly human studiesNeurologic outcomeSecondary outcomesArterial pressureInitial patientsPrimary outcomeSpontaneous circulationHemodynamic changesArterial access
2018
Video screen viewing and first intubation attempt success with standard geometry video laryngoscope use
Dodd K, Prekker M, Robinson A, Buckley R, Reardon R, Driver B. Video screen viewing and first intubation attempt success with standard geometry video laryngoscope use. The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2018, 37: 1336-1339. PMID: 30528054, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2018.10.018.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsFirst-attempt successFirst-attempt success rateVideo LaryngoscopySuccess rateHigher first-attempt successEmergency department intubationAcademic medical centerElectronic medical recordsCalendar year 2013Video laryngoscope useDifficult airwayTracheal intubationOrotracheal intubationEmergency intubationMedical recordsAttempt successEmergency physiciansMedical CenterVideo laryngoscopeClinical practiceIntubationMacintosh video laryngoscopeReal-world settingVL devicesPhysicians