Acute heart failure and pulmonary oedema
50 results
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Acute heart failure and pulmonary oedema - Essentials
- General remarks
- Monitoring on the ward
- Post-discharge instructions and follow-up care plan
- References
- Assessment of clinical status
- Laboratory test and imaging studies
- Differential diagnosis
- Triggering and aggravating factors
- Causal treatment
- Starting treatment, and treatment of congestive heart failure
- Prognostically beneficial medication of systolic heart failure
- Management of diuretic resistance
Leg oedema
Exercise stress test
Pneumonia
Dyspnoea
Pleural effusions and thoracentesis
Non‐invasive positive pressure ventilation (CPAP or bilevel NPPV) for cardiogenic pulmonary oedema
Respiratory failure
Chronic heart failure
Haemoptysis
Mitral regurgitation
Prehospital emergency care
Acute kidney injury
Aortic stenosis
Management of acute atrial fibrillation
Increased pulmonary blood pressure: pulmonary arterial hypertension and chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
Assessment of ventricular hypertrophies from an ECG
Acute abdomen in the adult
Chest x-ray interpretation
Acute coronary syndrome
The most common types of acquired adult valvular heart disease and associated murmurs
Renal disease in children (nephrotic and nephritic syndrome)
Palliative treatment
Deep vein thrombosis
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
Temperature-induced skin disorders
Rehabilitation of patients with spinal cord injury, and problems associated with such injury

