Emergency Alternatives to Intravenous Access: Intraosseous Intratracheal, Sublingual and Other-Site Drug Administration
- 1 December 1994
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Elsevier BV in Pediatric Clinics of North America
- Vol. 41 (6), 1183-1199
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0031-3955(16)38868-x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Five-year experience in prehospital intraosseous infusions in children and adultsAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1993
- A prehospital model of intraosseous infusionAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1991
- The bone marrow as a source of laboratory studiesAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1989
- Iatrogenic bilateral tibial fractures after intraosseous infusion attempts in a 3-month-old infantAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1989
- The safety of intraosseous infusions: Risks of fat and bone marrow emboli to the lungsAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1989
- The effect of dilution on plasma lidocaine levels with endotracheal administrationAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1987
- Canine cardiovascular responses to endotracheally and intravenously administered atropine, isoproterenol, and propranololAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1987
- Intraosseous infusion: An alternative route of pediatric intravascular accessAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1985
- Efficacy of absorption of sublingual and intravenous cardio-greenAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1984
- Bone marrow infusion in childhood: Experiences from a thousand infusionsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1947