Published numerous articles related to anesthesia or Alabama history. At University of Alabama at Birmingham Dept of Anesthesiology as Clinical Librarian 1983-2015.
... Adolph H. Giesecke, MD Brief biographies of Doctors Robert Dodd, Robert Capps and Thomas K. B... more ... Adolph H. Giesecke, MD Brief biographies of Doctors Robert Dodd, Robert Capps and Thomas K. Burnap Rajesh P. Haridas, MD A Survery of Oropharyngeal Airways used in Anesthesiology ... C. Ronald Stephen Festive 90th Birthday Gala ...
... Humberto Sainz Cabrera, MD Professor of Anesthesiology President of the Cuban Society of Anes... more ... Humberto Sainz Cabrera, MD Professor of Anesthesiology President of the Cuban Society of Anesthesiology and Reanimation Secretary of the Confederation ... Douglas R. Bacon, MD, MA The 1960s - The ASA Comes of Age Adolph H. Giesecke, MD Former Jenkins Professor of ...
... Snadjr arrived at once and found Heydrich seated on the examining table, bare-chested, silent... more ... Snadjr arrived at once and found Heydrich seated on the examining table, bare-chested, silent and aloof ... At first he thought that the wound was limited to the chest wall and could be debrided ... taken to the radiology suite in a wheelchair but walked unassisted to the X-Ray machine ...
ABSTRACT Between summer 1936 and spring 1939, more than 14,000 German military personnel particip... more ABSTRACT Between summer 1936 and spring 1939, more than 14,000 German military personnel participated in the Spanish Civil War, and were known as the Legion Condor. This group included thousands of Luftwaffe airmen and a medical battalion with a field hospital. Wounded were flown back to Germany aboard Ju 52 ambulance planes.The Legion's major medical contribution was the creation of a superb service of air evacuation to fly seriously injured soldiers over long distances at high altitude. This service was developed by the Luftwaffe's young and dynamic medical officers, who had a good knowledge of the U.S. literature on aviation medicine.
The German firm E. Merck released in 1928, an injectable mixture of scopolamine, oxycodone, and e... more The German firm E. Merck released in 1928, an injectable mixture of scopolamine, oxycodone, and ephedrine under the name SEE. This drug, renamed Scophedal in 1942 caused deep and prolonged analgesia, sedation, euphoria and amnesia without significant respiratory or circulatory depression. Used extensively by the German and Central European surgeons in the 1930s, Scophedal enjoyed immense popularity with the Wehrmacht's medical officers treating frontline mass casualties during World War II. The use of Scophedal declined after 1945, and its production was discontinued in 1987. Despite the clinical enthusiasm it raised, SEE was never critically investigated. This drug may deserve a rigorous re-evaluation.
... Adolph H. Giesecke, MD Brief biographies of Doctors Robert Dodd, Robert Capps and Thomas K. B... more ... Adolph H. Giesecke, MD Brief biographies of Doctors Robert Dodd, Robert Capps and Thomas K. Burnap Rajesh P. Haridas, MD A Survery of Oropharyngeal Airways used in Anesthesiology ... C. Ronald Stephen Festive 90th Birthday Gala ...
... Humberto Sainz Cabrera, MD Professor of Anesthesiology President of the Cuban Society of Anes... more ... Humberto Sainz Cabrera, MD Professor of Anesthesiology President of the Cuban Society of Anesthesiology and Reanimation Secretary of the Confederation ... Douglas R. Bacon, MD, MA The 1960s - The ASA Comes of Age Adolph H. Giesecke, MD Former Jenkins Professor of ...
... Snadjr arrived at once and found Heydrich seated on the examining table, bare-chested, silent... more ... Snadjr arrived at once and found Heydrich seated on the examining table, bare-chested, silent and aloof ... At first he thought that the wound was limited to the chest wall and could be debrided ... taken to the radiology suite in a wheelchair but walked unassisted to the X-Ray machine ...
ABSTRACT Between summer 1936 and spring 1939, more than 14,000 German military personnel particip... more ABSTRACT Between summer 1936 and spring 1939, more than 14,000 German military personnel participated in the Spanish Civil War, and were known as the Legion Condor. This group included thousands of Luftwaffe airmen and a medical battalion with a field hospital. Wounded were flown back to Germany aboard Ju 52 ambulance planes.The Legion's major medical contribution was the creation of a superb service of air evacuation to fly seriously injured soldiers over long distances at high altitude. This service was developed by the Luftwaffe's young and dynamic medical officers, who had a good knowledge of the U.S. literature on aviation medicine.
The German firm E. Merck released in 1928, an injectable mixture of scopolamine, oxycodone, and e... more The German firm E. Merck released in 1928, an injectable mixture of scopolamine, oxycodone, and ephedrine under the name SEE. This drug, renamed Scophedal in 1942 caused deep and prolonged analgesia, sedation, euphoria and amnesia without significant respiratory or circulatory depression. Used extensively by the German and Central European surgeons in the 1930s, Scophedal enjoyed immense popularity with the Wehrmacht's medical officers treating frontline mass casualties during World War II. The use of Scophedal declined after 1945, and its production was discontinued in 1987. Despite the clinical enthusiasm it raised, SEE was never critically investigated. This drug may deserve a rigorous re-evaluation.
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