H Schieren
Thomas Jefferson University
15 Papers
119 Citations
H Schieren is an academic researcher from Thomas Jefferson University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hemodynamics & Transdermal. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 15 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
A comparison of four bedside methods of hemoglobin assessment during cardiac surgery.
TL;DR: The rank order of closest approximation to the Coulter measurement for all in vivo blood samples was provided by bedside photometry, followed by centrifugation, adjusted conductivity, and uncorrected conductivity methods.
58
Sevoflurane Versus Isoflurane for Maintenance of Anesthesia: Are Serum Inorganic Fluoride Ion Concentrations of Concern?
Michael E. Goldberg,J. Cantillo,Ghassem E. Larijani,Marc C. Torjman,Denis Vekeman,H Schieren +5 more
TL;DR: Sevoflurane-mediated increases in serum fluoride levels peaked at 1 h and, in general, decreased rapidly after discontinuation of the anesthesia.
43
Fenoldopam infusion for the treatment of postoperative hypertension
Michael E. Goldberg,J. Cantillo,Mark S. Nemiroff,Jaya Subramoni,Raul Muñoz,Marc C. Torjman,H Schieren +6 more
TL;DR: Fenoldopam is an effective drug for reducing BP following hypertensive episodes in the postoperative setting and use is associated with an increase in HR versus placebo.
29
The pharmacokinetics of droperidol in anesthetized children.
TL;DR: The relatively short half-life of droperidol for the pediatric population does not explain its extended antiemetic action, but it does reaffirm that the pharmacokinetic duration of a drug's action is only one of the determinants of its clinical duration.
19
Intraoperative hemodynamic, renin, and catecholamine responses after prophylactic and intraoperative administration of intravenous enalaprilat.
Maria Heropoulos,H Schieren,Joseph L. Seltzer,Richard R. Bartkowski,Jennifer Lessin,Marc C. Torjman,Christine Moody,Michael E. Goldberg +7 more
TL;DR: Preoperative or intraoperative treatment with enalaprilat reduced neither the pressor response to tourniquet inflation nor the amount of enflurane subsequently required to control arterial blood pressure, suggesting that this response is mediated by pain pathways, and may be treated more effectively with anesthesia/analgesia.
17