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1 noncomatose patients who subsequently became comatose.
2 core and cumulative doses of sedatives while comatose.
3 roups based on their best examination as (1) comatose, (2) arousable (eye opening or attending toward
4 ale scores grouped into four levels denoted "comatose" (-5), "deeply sedated" (-4 to -3), "lightly se
5     Before LT, the majority of patients were comatose (76%), on hemodialysis (16%), and ICU-bound.
6 mpiric use of naloxone and flumazenil in the comatose adult patient who presents to the emergency dep
7      We examined a prospective cohort of 103 comatose adult patients who were unconscious 48 hours af
8 atients were assessed for eligibility and 98 comatose adults (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score of </=8
9                                  Consecutive comatose adults admitted after cardiac arrest, identifie
10   Therapeutic hypothermia is recommended for comatose adults after witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac
11 ed temperature management is recommended for comatose adults and children after out-of-hospital cardi
12                               Patients still comatose after a witnessed OHCA of presumed cardiac orig
13 multicenter cohort were 46 patients who were comatose after CA.
14                             Patients who are comatose after cardiac arrest continue to be a challenge
15 been standard of care for patients remaining comatose after resuscitation from out-of-hospital cardia
16 dicate ICP monitoring in patients who remain comatose after resuscitation if the admission computed t
17 n-traumatic cardiac arrest patients who were comatose after return of spontaneous circulation.
18 as follows: age >/=18, nontrauma arrest, and comatose after return of spontaneous circulation.
19 than 17 years, nontrauma cardiac arrest, and comatose after return of spontaneous circulation.
20                                    Brains of comatose ALF mice were processed for histological and bi
21 rature-sensitive paralytic mutations in NSF (comatose) also block synaptic transmission, but over a m
22 lar synapses of Drosophila double mutant for comatose (an NSF mutant) and Kum (a SERCA mutant), and p
23 chieved spontaneous circulation but remained comatose and (except one) died within 58 hrs with multip
24 uillain-Barre syndrome, or when a patient is comatose and cardinal signs may be lacking.
25                  All patients were initially comatose and had invasive brain monitoring placed.
26  between 0.4 hours (for patients who are not comatose and had no prior seizure) and 16.4 hours (comat
27 thalamus, brain stem, and cerebellum between comatose and noncomatose patients acutely after TBI.
28                    However, compared between comatose and noncomatose patients, CMRglc values in the
29 se and had no prior seizure) and 16.4 hours (comatose and prior seizure).
30 ositive for delirium, 13% were classified as comatose, and 62% were delirium-free and coma-free.
31 are units who were possibly brain stem dead (comatose, apparently apnoeic with unresponsive pupils) d
32      Eighty-one percent of patients who were comatose at admission survived.
33 itated by prehospital personnel yet remained comatose at arrival to the hospital.
34 H were restricted to those patients who were comatose at hospital admission.
35  was performed in 241 of 941 (25.6%) persons comatose at hospital admission.
36                   Over half of patients were comatose at presentation (53%).
37 the primary admission diagnosis and 48% were comatose at the time of cEEG.
38 ain networks had typically become nonhubs of comatose brain networks and vice versa.
39                          All FHF rats became comatose by 24 hours postoperatively.
40                   Prognostication studies on comatose cardiac arrest (CA) patients are limited by lac
41 ppropriate time frame for prognostication in comatose cardiac arrest survivors treated with therapeut
42                                 In initially comatose cardiac arrest survivors, improvements in funct
43 therapeutic hypothermia improves outcomes in comatose cardiac arrest survivors.
44 hin 6 hours after the return of circulation, comatose children older than 48 hours and younger than 1
45                                        Among comatose children who survived in-hospital cardiac arres
46                                           In comatose children who survived out-of-hospital cardiac a
47                                           In comatose children, with Glasgow Motor Scale score less t
48                               The Drosophila comatose (comt) gene encodes an NSF homolog, dNSF1.
49 temperature-sensitive paralytic phenotype in comatose (comt) mutants.
50  temperature-sensitive Drosophila NSF mutant comatose (comt) to study the function of NSF in neurotra
51 ve cerebral malaria and 264 age-matched, non-comatose controls were followed up for a median of 495 d
52                     Whilst the morphology of comatose (cts) embryos is not altered, physiological ana
53                                              COMATOSE (CTS) encodes a peroxisomal ATP-binding cassett
54            Here we show that the Arabidopsis COMATOSE (CTS) locus is required for this transition, an
55                                        Using COMATOSE (CTS), a plant representative of the ABCD famil
56  phenotype comparable with that reported for comatose (cts-2), a mutant in a peroxisomal ABC transpor
57 ns, we have undertaken a genetic analysis of comatose (dNSF-1) in Drosophila.
58                        Ventilator-dependent, comatose, do not resuscitate, and female patients were e
59 tire vesicle pool can be depleted in shibire comatose double mutants, demonstrating that NSF activity
60 ors had favorable outcomes despite remaining comatose for 1 to 2 weeks postarrest.
61                                      Fifteen comatose (Glasgow Coma Scale score of < or = 7) adult pa
62                 The incidence of survival of comatose hospital patients decreased by 29% from 1975 to
63                                              Comatose humans have upper airway soft tissue obstructio
64                     In 1960, measurements on comatose humans with or without cardiac arrest, with or
65 umented bacterial aspiration pneumonia among comatose ICU patients with symptoms suggesting either ba
66 atus, resuscitation from cardiac arrest, and comatose immediately after resuscitation.
67 peroxisomal ATP-binding cassette transporter COMATOSE is required for the accumulation of benzoylated
68                              Mutation of the COMATOSE locus in Arabidopsis results in a marked reduct
69 behavioral paralysis that normally occurs in comatose mutants, indicating NSF activity is not require
70 of mammalian NSF (G274E) and Drosophila NSF (comatose) mutants revealed an evolutionarily conserved N
71 ac mutant was identified as an enhancer of a comatose mutation's effects on general locomotion.
72                       Characterization of 16 comatose mutations demonstrates that NSF mediates disass
73 Performance Category 3-5, severe disability, comatose, or death).
74 able neurologic outcome in a large cohort of comatose out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients treated
75                    The classification of the comatose patient has been greatly improved with the use
76                                            A comatose patient has neither wakefulness nor awareness;
77  approach for the clinical management of the comatose patient.
78 evels of the inflammatory mediator IL-6 than comatose patients (129.3 vs. 35.0 pg/mL, p=0.05).
79                              One hundred ten comatose patients (aged 24-76 years) who had experienced
80 nter prospective cohort study included adult comatose patients admitted to the intensive care unit (I
81 o rapidly induce and maintain hypothermia in comatose patients after cardiac arrest and a small numbe
82 res provides unequalled prognostic value for comatose patients after cardiac arrest and enables bedsi
83         Two hundred eighty-three consecutive comatose patients after cardiac arrest.
84 measures contribute to outcome prediction of comatose patients after cardiac arrest.
85 logy assessments, or functional survival for comatose patients after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
86 ble, the results were abnormal for all eight comatose patients as well as for all three noncomatose p
87                     Excluding evaluations of comatose patients because of lack of characteristic deli
88                                  Parasitized comatose patients dying of other causes are less likely
89 the utility of the neurologic examination in comatose patients from nontraumatic causes in the modern
90         Acute administration of exenatide to comatose patients in the intensive care unit after OHCA
91                                        Among comatose patients receiving mechanical ventilation, thos
92                                              Comatose patients resuscitated after out-of-hospital car
93         We randomly assigned 120 consecutive comatose patients resuscitated from OHCA in a double-bli
94                     In-hospital mortality in comatose patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital card
95  postresuscitation care for resuscitated but comatose patients that includes therapeutic hypothermia
96           We studied a cohort of consecutive comatose patients treated after cardiac arrest from Janu
97                               A total of 110 comatose patients who had experienced OHCA from a cardia
98 l outcomes after global ischaemia-hypoxia in comatose patients who have had cardiac arrest, and is on
99                                    Among 249 comatose patients who received prehospital care, 205 die
100                                    Among 101 comatose patients who were hospitalized, 63 died; the od
101 hin 6 hours after the return of circulation, comatose patients who were older than 2 days and younger
102 d, HIPAA-compliant retrospective study of 80 comatose patients with cardiac arrest who underwent diff
103 s safe and can provide metabolic support for comatose patients with fulminant hepatic failure for up
104    This prospective cohort study included 90 comatose patients with high-grade spontaneous subarachno
105 age should be considered in all stuporous or comatose patients with intraventricular haemorrhage and
106 study, we prospectively enrolled consecutive comatose patients with irreversible brain injury undergo
107 thesized musical instrument tones in 22 post-comatose patients with severe brain injury causing varia
108                        After inclusion of 98 comatose patients, the trial was stopped early at the re
109 lography responses to auditory stimuli in 94 comatose patients, under hypothermia and after re-warmin
110 g/min, P < 0.05) were significantly lower in comatose patients.
111 meeting readiness criteria, particularly for comatose patients.
112 ement are associated with acute awakening in comatose patients.
113  global network properties were conserved in comatose patients.
114  targeted temperature management) be used in comatose post-cardiac arrest patients?
115                             Of our cohort of comatose postarrest patients, 59% (29 of 49) were male,
116 wn about when to assess neurologic status in comatose, postarrest patients receiving therapeutic hypo
117                                  Consecutive comatose postcardiac arrest patients were prospectively
118                          Quantitative DWI in comatose postcardiac arrest survivors holds promise as a
119         Outcome prediction is challenging in comatose postcardiac arrest survivors.
120 or no analgesia/sedation, in a predominantly comatose sample.
121 es, spend a considerable amount of time in a comatose state that can include time in burst suppressio
122 y in the descending aorta, and pre-operative comatose state were independent predictors, again with i
123 ltrates or cavities on chest radiograph; and comatose state, intubation, receipt of pressors, or deat
124         Pre-operative cerebral malperfusion, comatose state, peripheral malperfusion, visceral malper
125 multimodality physiological recordings in 48 comatose subarachnoid hemorrhage patients to better char
126                                 Twenty of 56 comatose survivors (32%) treated with hypothermia who aw
127 ute ischemic stroke, induced hypothermia for comatose survivors of cardiac arrest, and endovascular c
128 Surface cooling improves outcome in selected comatose survivors of cardiac arrest.
129 hermia (TH) attenuates reperfusion injury in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest.
130 t mild induced hypothermia be considered for comatose survivors of in-hospital cardiac arrest.
131                                        Among comatose survivors of OHCA, in comparison with hypotherm
132 rmia attenuates brain white matter injury in comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OH
133                       It is recommended that comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest sho
134                                        Among comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, in
135 peutic hypothermia and neurologic outcome in comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
136 ia induced after successful resuscitation of comatose survivors of ventricular fibrillation cardiac a
137                The study cohort included 154 comatose survivors of witnessed out-of-hospital cardiopu
138  (13.5%) were excluded because they remained comatose throughout the investigation.
139 m recorded (CAM-ICU-), and 27 (29%) remained comatose until extubation or death.
140                            Patients who were comatose were less likely to receive these medications.

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