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21


SUCCESSFUL COLLABORATION FOR SEAMLESS POST RESUSCITATION CARE [Meeting Abstract]

Dillworth, Judy; Myburgh, MLynn; Schwartz, David
ISI:000272509900519
ISSN: 0090-3493
CID: 2460462

A 61-year-old-man with massive intravascular hemolysis [Case Report]

Uppal, Amit; Hymes, Kenneth; Schwartz, David R
PMID: 19892684
ISSN: 0012-3692
CID: 159073

Paradoxical worsening of shock after the use of a percutaneous mechanical thrombectomy device in a postpartum patient with a massive pulmonary embolism [Case Report]

Kumar, Nidhi; Janjigian, Yelena; Schwartz, David R
PMID: 17699140
ISSN: 0012-3692
CID: 73938

Local anesthetics

Chapter by: Schwartz, David R; Kaufman, Brian
in: Goldfrank's toxicologic emergencies by Goldfrank LR; Flomenbaum N [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, 2006
pp. 1004-1015
ISBN: 0071437630
CID: 4564

Continuous positive airway pressure and postoperative hypoxemia [Letter]

Frangos, Spiros G; Schwartz, David R
PMID: 15941797
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 62581

Prolonged intrathecal baclofen withdrawal syndrome. Case report and discussion of current therapeutic management [Case Report]

Douglas, Andrea F; Weiner, Howard L; Schwartz, David R
The authors describe a patient who experienced a prolonged course of intrathecal baclofen withdrawal syndrome after removal of an implantable baclofen pump for treatment of pump infection and meningitis. The current literature outlines management options for the acute management of this syndrome. In this report the authors discuss the long-term presentation of this syndrome and suggest a treatment strategy for management of the syndrome. A 37-year-old man who presented with a baclofen pump infection and meningitis experienced acute onset of intrathecal baclofen withdrawal syndrome 12 hours after the pump had been surgically removed. The patient's symptoms evolved into a severe, treatment-refractory withdrawal syndrome lasting longer than 1 month. Oral baclofen replacement with adjunctive administration of parenteral gamma-aminobutyric acid agonists only served to stabilize the patient's critical condition throughout his hospital course. Replacement of the baclofen pump and restoration of intrathecal delivery of the medication was necessary to trigger the patient's dramatic recovery and complete reversal of the withdrawal syndrome within approximately 48 hours. These findings indicate that a more direct method of treating infected baclofen pumps than immediate surgical removal is necessary to prevent the onset of intrathecal baclofen withdrawal syndrome. Various options for preventing the onset of the syndrome while simultaneously treating the infection are discussed
PMID: 16028775
ISSN: 0022-3085
CID: 57589

Toxic epidermal necrolysis-like reaction secondary to colchicine overdose [Case Report]

Arroyo, M P; Sanders, S; Yee, H; Schwartz, D; Kamino, H; Strober, B E
Colchicine is a microtubule-inhibiting drug used to treat gout, familial Mediterranean fever and many other skin diseases. Intoxication with colchicine affects multiple organs, often fatally. Cutaneous sequelae of colchicine toxicity are rare. We describe the clinical and histological features of a toxic epidermal necrolysis-like exanthem in a patient who lethally overdosed on colchicine
PMID: 15030347
ISSN: 0007-0963
CID: 42921

Treatment of oxygen-induced hypercapnia [Letter]

Malhotra, A; Schwartz, D R; Ayas, N; Stanchina, M; White, D P
PMID: 11265981
ISSN: 0140-6736
CID: 1507062

Microcirculatory weak units--an alternative explanation [Letter]

Schwartz, D R; Malhotra, A; Fink, M P
PMID: 10966332
ISSN: 0090-3493
CID: 1507072

Negative pressure pulmonary hemorrhage [Case Report]

Schwartz, D R; Maroo, A; Malhotra, A; Kesselman, H
Negative pressure pulmonary edema, a well-recognized phenomenon, is the formation of pulmonary edema following an acute upper airway obstruction (UAO). To our knowledge, diffuse alveolar hemorrhage has not been reported previously as a complication of an UAO. We describe a case of negative pressure pulmonary hemorrhage, and we propose that its etiology is stress failure, the mechanical disruption of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
PMID: 10208229
ISSN: 0012-3692
CID: 1507052