Talk:Resuscitation
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Split proposal
[edit]Resuscitaton is not the same as CPR - it describes the process of correcting physiological abnormalities (eg hypovolaemia in septic shock etc) and is a major part of trauma surgery, where the patient may be breathing for themselves/have a perfusing heart rhythm. Mschamberlain (talk) 11:11, 3 October 2014 (UTC)
Fluid resuscitation
[edit]Should fluid resuscitation (actually a redirect to fluid replacement) be included in the "See also" section? --SoledadKabocha (talk) 21:04, 10 June 2015 (UTC)
Please update with: "Cellular recovery after prolonged warm ischaemia of the whole body"
[edit]I don't know what info about this approach belongs here at this point, but I do think probably at least one wikilink would be due here and/or at a more appropriate article (which?).
Included it in 2022 in science like so:
3 August – Scientists report an organ perfusion system that can restore, i.e. on the cellular level, multiple vital (pig) organs one hour after death (during which the body had warm ischaemia),[1][2] after reporting a similar method/system for reviving (pig) brains hours after death in 2019.[1][3] This could be used to preserve donor organs or for revival in medical emergencies.[1]
From the news article reference:
He said the technology could also be used to buy more time for doctors to treat people whose bodies were starved of oxygen, such as those who died from drowning or heart attacks.
He added that this could "bring such people back to life many hours after death".
This seems to be missing in this article...it could also be the case that it's only/more relevant to Intensive care medicine#Procedures and treatments for example.
To clarify: with that I'm not suggesting that necessarily this study in specific or this content in specific should be added. For example, the system/method of the study/ies may be part of a class of methods or type of approach (or similar) which could be wikilinked here (if there is an article or just named without wikilink if there isn't).
References
- ^ a b c "Pig organs partially revived hour after death". BBC News. 3 August 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
- ^ Andrijevic, David; Vrselja, Zvonimir; Lysyy, Taras; Zhang, Shupei; Skarica, Mario; Spajic, Ana; Dellal, David; Thorn, Stephanie L.; Duckrow, Robert B.; Ma, Shaojie; Duy, Phan Q.; Isiktas, Atagun U.; Liang, Dan; Li, Mingfeng; Kim, Suel-Kee; Daniele, Stefano G.; Banu, Khadija; Perincheri, Sudhir; Menon, Madhav C.; Huttner, Anita; Sheth, Kevin N.; Gobeske, Kevin T.; Tietjen, Gregory T.; Zaveri, Hitten P.; Latham, Stephen R.; Sinusas, Albert J.; Sestan, Nenad (August 2022). "Cellular recovery after prolonged warm ischaemia of the whole body". Nature. 608 (7922): 405–412. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05016-1. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 35922506. S2CID 251316299.
- ^ Vrselja, Zvonimir; Daniele, Stefano G.; Silbereis, John; Talpo, Francesca; Morozov, Yury M.; Sousa, André M. M.; Tanaka, Brian S.; Skarica, Mario; Pletikos, Mihovil; Kaur, Navjot; Zhuang, Zhen W.; Liu, Zhao; Alkawadri, Rafeed; Sinusas, Albert J.; Latham, Stephen R.; Waxman, Stephen G.; Sestan, Nenad (April 2019). "Restoration of brain circulation and cellular functions hours post-mortem". Nature. 568 (7752): 336–343. Bibcode:2019Natur.568..336V. doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1099-1. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 6844189. PMID 30996318.