Manuel Boller | University of Melbourne (original) (raw)
Papers by Manuel Boller
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 6, 2016
To provide recommendations for reviewing and reporting clinical in-hospital cardiopulmonary resus... more To provide recommendations for reviewing and reporting clinical in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) events in dogs and cats and to establish nonambiguous operational definitions for CPR terminology. Consensus guidelines. International, academia, referral practice, general practice, and human medicine. An international veterinary Utstein task force was convened in April 2013 in San Francisco to determine the scope of the project, the variables to be reported, their definitions, and a reporting template. Factors that were essential for meaningful data reporting and were amenable to accurate collection (ie, core variables) and additional variables useful for research projects and hypothesis generation (ie, supplemental variables) were defined. Consensus on each item was either achieved during that meeting or during the subsequent online modified Delphi process and dialogue between task force members. Variables were defined and categorized as hospital, animal, event (arrest)...
August's Consultations in Feline Internal Medicine, Volume 7, 2016
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Small animal practice, 2015
Perioperative patients can be highly dynamic and have various metabolic, physiologic, and organ s... more Perioperative patients can be highly dynamic and have various metabolic, physiologic, and organ system derangements that necessitate smart monitoring strategies and careful fluid therapy. The interplay between changing patient status, therapeutic interventions, and patient response makes effective monitoring crucial to successful treatment. Monitoring the perioperative patient and an approach to fluid therapy are discussed in this text.
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 22, 2015
Critical Care Medicine
Introduction: Naturally occurring cardiopulmonary arrest is a common event in hospitalized pet do... more Introduction: Naturally occurring cardiopulmonary arrest is a common event in hospitalized pet dogs and cats. CPR is executed on a routine basis and in accordance to clinical consensus guidelines in an attempt to safe these animals. Translational studies, conducted in a realistic setting of naturally occurring cardiac arrest in dogs could overcome many issues associated with laboratory 'bench-top' studies. However, ambiguity exists in regards to terminology and operational definitions of hospital, patient, and event variables crucial to reporting clinical pet CPR research. This deficiency needs to be overcome before interventional clinical trials and registries in pet CPR can be implemented. Methods: A pet Utstein task force composed of an international group of experts in veterinary resuscitation and members of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) drafted a list of operational definitions critical to canine and feline in-hospital CPR. At a meeting in...
Equine Veterinary Education, 2005
... Blanchard, TL, Schumacher J., Edwards, JF, Varner, DD, Lewis, RD, Everett, K. and Joyce, JR (... more ... Blanchard, TL, Schumacher J., Edwards, JF, Varner, DD, Lewis, RD, Everett, K. and Joyce, JR (1991) Priapism in a stallion with generalized ... Pohl, J., Pott, B. and Kleinhans, G. (1986) Priapism: a three-phase concept of management according to aetiology and prognosis. Br. ...
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2009
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2009
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2015
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2015
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2013
For dogs and cats that experience cardiopulmonary arrest, rates of survival to discharge are 6% t... more For dogs and cats that experience cardiopulmonary arrest, rates of survival to discharge are 6% to 7%, as compared with survival rates of 20% for people. The introduction of standardized cardiopulmonary resuscitation guidelines and training in human medicine has led to substantial improvements in outcome. The Reassessment Campaign on Veterinary Resuscitation initiative recently completed an exhaustive literature review and generated a set of evidence-based, consensus cardiopulmonary resuscitation guidelines in 5 domains: preparedness and prevention, basic life support, advanced life support, monitoring, and postcardiac arrest care. This article reviews some of the most important of these new guidelines.
Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2000
Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2001
Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care, 2010
To characterize the provision of CPCR by small animal veterinarians in clinical practice and to a... more To characterize the provision of CPCR by small animal veterinarians in clinical practice and to assess how this practice varies among different levels of expertise. Internet-based survey. Academia, referral practice, and general practice. Six hundred and two small animal veterinarians in clinical practice. Respondents were grouped a priori according to level of expertise: board-certified (ACVECC, ACVA, ECVAA) specialists; general practitioners in emergency clinics; general practitioners in general practice (GPG). Email invitations to the online questionnaire were disseminated via a veterinary internet platform and mailing list server discussion groups. Questions explored respondent characteristics, CPCR preparedness, infrastructural and personnel resources, and techniques of basic and advanced life support. In this group of practitioners, the majority (65%) were in general practice. GPG were more likely to perform CPCR <5 times per year and to have 3 or fewer members on their resuscitation team. Most practitioners have a crash cart and drug-dosing chart available. GPG were less likely to obtain resuscitation codes on their patients, and less likely to use end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring or defibrillation. Intubation, oxygen supplementation, vascular access, and external thoracic compressions were widely used, however, GPG were more likely to use lower chest compression rates. Drugs used for CPCR differed among the groups with GPG more likely to use doxapram and glucocorticoids. CPCR is heterogeneously performed in small animal veterinary medicine; differences exist, both among and within different types of veterinarians with varying levels of expertise, in respect to available infrastructure, personnel and CPCR techniques used.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, Jan 1, 2012
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 1, 2012
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 1, 2012
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 6, 2016
To provide recommendations for reviewing and reporting clinical in-hospital cardiopulmonary resus... more To provide recommendations for reviewing and reporting clinical in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) events in dogs and cats and to establish nonambiguous operational definitions for CPR terminology. Consensus guidelines. International, academia, referral practice, general practice, and human medicine. An international veterinary Utstein task force was convened in April 2013 in San Francisco to determine the scope of the project, the variables to be reported, their definitions, and a reporting template. Factors that were essential for meaningful data reporting and were amenable to accurate collection (ie, core variables) and additional variables useful for research projects and hypothesis generation (ie, supplemental variables) were defined. Consensus on each item was either achieved during that meeting or during the subsequent online modified Delphi process and dialogue between task force members. Variables were defined and categorized as hospital, animal, event (arrest)...
August's Consultations in Feline Internal Medicine, Volume 7, 2016
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Small animal practice, 2015
Perioperative patients can be highly dynamic and have various metabolic, physiologic, and organ s... more Perioperative patients can be highly dynamic and have various metabolic, physiologic, and organ system derangements that necessitate smart monitoring strategies and careful fluid therapy. The interplay between changing patient status, therapeutic interventions, and patient response makes effective monitoring crucial to successful treatment. Monitoring the perioperative patient and an approach to fluid therapy are discussed in this text.
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 22, 2015
Critical Care Medicine
Introduction: Naturally occurring cardiopulmonary arrest is a common event in hospitalized pet do... more Introduction: Naturally occurring cardiopulmonary arrest is a common event in hospitalized pet dogs and cats. CPR is executed on a routine basis and in accordance to clinical consensus guidelines in an attempt to safe these animals. Translational studies, conducted in a realistic setting of naturally occurring cardiac arrest in dogs could overcome many issues associated with laboratory 'bench-top' studies. However, ambiguity exists in regards to terminology and operational definitions of hospital, patient, and event variables crucial to reporting clinical pet CPR research. This deficiency needs to be overcome before interventional clinical trials and registries in pet CPR can be implemented. Methods: A pet Utstein task force composed of an international group of experts in veterinary resuscitation and members of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) drafted a list of operational definitions critical to canine and feline in-hospital CPR. At a meeting in...
Equine Veterinary Education, 2005
... Blanchard, TL, Schumacher J., Edwards, JF, Varner, DD, Lewis, RD, Everett, K. and Joyce, JR (... more ... Blanchard, TL, Schumacher J., Edwards, JF, Varner, DD, Lewis, RD, Everett, K. and Joyce, JR (1991) Priapism in a stallion with generalized ... Pohl, J., Pott, B. and Kleinhans, G. (1986) Priapism: a three-phase concept of management according to aetiology and prognosis. Br. ...
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2009
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2009
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2015
Small Animal Critical Care Medicine, 2015
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2013
For dogs and cats that experience cardiopulmonary arrest, rates of survival to discharge are 6% t... more For dogs and cats that experience cardiopulmonary arrest, rates of survival to discharge are 6% to 7%, as compared with survival rates of 20% for people. The introduction of standardized cardiopulmonary resuscitation guidelines and training in human medicine has led to substantial improvements in outcome. The Reassessment Campaign on Veterinary Resuscitation initiative recently completed an exhaustive literature review and generated a set of evidence-based, consensus cardiopulmonary resuscitation guidelines in 5 domains: preparedness and prevention, basic life support, advanced life support, monitoring, and postcardiac arrest care. This article reviews some of the most important of these new guidelines.
Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2000
Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2001
Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care, 2010
To characterize the provision of CPCR by small animal veterinarians in clinical practice and to a... more To characterize the provision of CPCR by small animal veterinarians in clinical practice and to assess how this practice varies among different levels of expertise. Internet-based survey. Academia, referral practice, and general practice. Six hundred and two small animal veterinarians in clinical practice. Respondents were grouped a priori according to level of expertise: board-certified (ACVECC, ACVA, ECVAA) specialists; general practitioners in emergency clinics; general practitioners in general practice (GPG). Email invitations to the online questionnaire were disseminated via a veterinary internet platform and mailing list server discussion groups. Questions explored respondent characteristics, CPCR preparedness, infrastructural and personnel resources, and techniques of basic and advanced life support. In this group of practitioners, the majority (65%) were in general practice. GPG were more likely to perform CPCR <5 times per year and to have 3 or fewer members on their resuscitation team. Most practitioners have a crash cart and drug-dosing chart available. GPG were less likely to obtain resuscitation codes on their patients, and less likely to use end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring or defibrillation. Intubation, oxygen supplementation, vascular access, and external thoracic compressions were widely used, however, GPG were more likely to use lower chest compression rates. Drugs used for CPCR differed among the groups with GPG more likely to use doxapram and glucocorticoids. CPCR is heterogeneously performed in small animal veterinary medicine; differences exist, both among and within different types of veterinarians with varying levels of expertise, in respect to available infrastructure, personnel and CPCR techniques used.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, Jan 1, 2012
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 1, 2012
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001), Jan 1, 2012