Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Meeting Abstracts|
September 1987
EFFECTS OF GRADED HEMORRHAGIC HYPOTENSION ON CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW, BLOOD VOLUME AND MEAN TRANSIT TIME IN THE DOG
The Department of Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Anesthesiology September 1987, Vol. 67, A85.
Citation
M. Ferrari, D. A. Wilson, J. F. Hartmann, H. C. Rogers, R. J. Traystman; EFFECTS OF GRADED HEMORRHAGIC HYPOTENSION ON CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW, BLOOD VOLUME AND MEAN TRANSIT TIME IN THE DOG. Anesthesiology 1987; 67:A85 doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198709001-00085
Download citation file:
Citing articles via
Most Viewed
Related Articles
Hypoxic Brain Tissue following Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Anesthesiology (February 2000)
Acute Normovolemic Hemodilution Improves Oxygenation in Ischemic Flap Tissue
Anesthesiology (June 2002)
Temporal Transitions in Fibrinolysis after Trauma: Adverse Outcome Is Principally Related to Late Hypofibrinolysis
Anesthesiology (January 2022)
Functional Cerebral Hyperemia Is Unaffected by Isovolemic Hemodilution
Anesthesiology (January 2002)
Toll-like Receptor 4 Is Essential to Preserving Cardiac Function and Survival in Low-grade Polymicrobial Sepsis
Anesthesiology (December 2014)