Harefuah
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Cardiovascular complications are important causes of morbidity with major non cardiac procedures. Preoperative risk stratification relies on the identification of the cardiac problem, its stability, its severity and previous treatment. The approach to risk stratifying preoperative patients should be performed by accepted guidelines used for patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) or known CAD and not as an "obligatory test" prior to operation. ⋯ The use of invasive diagnostic and therapeutic methods, such as cardiac catheterization, PCI, CABG, has to be restricted only to patients who are at very high risk. The partial reduction of the cardiac event rate in the short term and monitoring for 24 hours after operation is most important, as well as the administration of beta blockers, starting prior to surgery. Furthermore, long term follow-up for cardiac events in these patients in essential, as the clinical predictors and cardiac tests performed for preoperative risk stratification are also used for long term prognosis.
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Various methods exist for rewarming hypothermia casualties. Most of these methods necessitate sophisticated medical equipment or vigorous hemodynamic and electrolytic monitoring. Therefore, only a few methods remain suitable for pre-hospital scenarios. ⋯ In moderate or severe hypothermia casualties, hypothermia (rectal temperature below 32 degrees C) however, is characterized by suppressed or deficient endogenous heat producing mechanisms. Passive rewarming is not enough in these cases, necessitating the addition of active, central or peripheral rewarming methods. Studies regarding the use of various active rewarming methods in severe hypothermia casualties revealed low rewarming efficacy for the low heat capacity methods, such as warm air inhalation, and a high rewarming efficacy for the high heat capacity methods, such as forced air methods.