Jus Ksela
University of Ljubljana
37 Papers
34 Citations
Jus Ksela is an academic researcher from University of Ljubljana. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Heart failure. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 20 publications. Previous affiliations of Jus Ksela include Ljubljana University Medical Centre.
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Papers
Restrictive versus Standard Fluid Regimen in Elective Minilaparotomy Abdominal Aortic Repair —Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial
TL;DR: Intra- and postoperative restrictive intravenous fluid regimen in patients undergoing minilaparotomy AAA repair significantly reduces postoperative morbidity, and shortens ICU and overall hospital stay.
Altered Heart Rate Turbulence and Variability Parameters Predict 1-Year Mortality in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction
TL;DR: HRT and HRV parameters have the ability to differentiate individuals withHFpEF who are at the greatest risk of unfavourable outcomes and could potentially assist in the prognostic assessment and risk stratification of HFpEF patients.
Multifractality in heartbeat dynamics in patients undergoing beating-heart myocardial revascularization
TL;DR: A significant breakdown of multifractal complexity and anti-correlation behavior with a significant sympathetic overdrive and a concomitant parasympathetic withdrawal occurs after off-pump CABG, and the circadian pattern of multifractionality regains its day-night variation in the first week after the surgical procedure.
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LVAD as a Bridge to Heart Transplantation in a Patient with Left Ventricular Noncompaction Cardiomyopathy and Advanced Heart Failure.
TL;DR: A 29-year-old patient with LVNC and advanced refractory heart failure, who was successfully bridged to heart transplantation using a long-term continuous-flow left ventricular assist device, is reported.
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Use of a totally artificial heart for a complex postinfarction ventricular septal defect.
Ivan Knezevic,Matija Jelenc,Nenad Danojevic,Manca Racic,Gregor Poglajen,Jus Ksela,V. Andročec,Tomaz Mesar,Ursa Mikuz,Bojan Vrtovec +9 more
TL;DR: A patient who presented to the authors' hospital with myocardial infarction and who subsequently developed a complex ventricular septal rupture, for which surgical repair was not feasible is discussed.
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