Muhammad Imran Ansari
11 Papers
1 Citations
Muhammad Imran Ansari is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Evaluating the Knowledge of Endotracheal Cuff Pressure Monitoring Among Critical Care Providers by Palpation of Pilot Balloon and By Endotracheal Tube Cuff Manometer.
Jawed Abubaker,Syed Zia Ullah,Shazia Ahmed,Aziz Rehman Memon,Zohaib Jawed Abubaker,Muhammad Imran Ansari,Musa Karim +6 more
TL;DR: Low levels of knowledge, poor adherence to standard practice, poor agreement between palpation method and cuff manometer measurements for assessing cuff pressure are observed in this study of knowledge and practice of ETT tube cuff pressure monitoring.
17
Mechanical ventilation in acute myocardial infarction: Outcomes from a prospective audit at a cardiovascular hospital in Pakistan
Muhammad Imran Ansari,Madiha Umair,Lalarukh Taimoor,Aziz Rehman Memon,Z. Abubaker,Muhammad Sohaib Arif,Nadeem Qamar,Musa Karim,Jawed Abubaker +8 more
TL;DR: Prolonged ventilator duration has significant prognostic implications; hence, tailored early recognition of high-risk patients needing more aggressive care can improve the outcomes.
3
Site of central venous access is not important for fluid resuscitation and monitoring
Muhammad Imran Ansari,Jawed Abubaker,Syed Zia Ullah,Adeel Sohail,Aziz Ur Rehman,Shazia Ahmad,Musa Karim +6 more
- 25 Jun 2019
TL;DR: Central venous pressure can be reliably and accurately measured through femoral site and the limits of agreement between the two approaches are analyzed by Bland and Altman plot.
Predicting Post-Extubation Respiratory Failure After Myocardial Infarction Using The Rapid Shallow Breathing Index And Lung Ultrasound Score.
TL;DR: Combined RSBI and LUS measured during spontaneous breathing trial in patients after an AMI, have high predictive abilities for identifying post-extubation RF.
1
Feeding Practices and Extubation Outcomes in Critically Ill Cardiac Patients: Insights from a High-Turnover ICU
Abdul Rahman,Muhammad Sohaib Arif,Mirza Yousuf Baig,Muhammad Imran Ansari,Madiha Umair,Lalarukh Taimoor,Zahid Ur Rehman,Jawed Abubaker +7 more
TL;DR: A prospective study of 309 critically ill cardiac patients found no significant differences in extubation failure, ICU mortality, or complications between continuous, interrupted, and fasting feeding groups, with higher BMI emerging as an independent predictor of extubation failure.