viernes, 11 de marzo de 2011

En este día...


ON THIS DAY

March 11

On March 11, 1941, President Roosevelt signed into law the Lend-Lease Bill, providing war supplies to countries fighting the Axis.
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On March 11, 1926, Ralph Abernathy, the American pastor and civil rights leader, was born. Following his death on April 17, 1990, his obituary appeared in The Times.

On This Date

1810Emperor Napoleon of France was married by proxy to Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria.
1888A blizzard struck the northeastern United States, resulting in some 400 deaths.
1941President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the Lend-Lease Bill, providing war supplies to countries fighting the Axis.
1942As Japanese forces continued to advance in the Pacific during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArthur left the Philippines for Australia. He subsequently vowed: "I shall return."
1970The album "Deja Vu" by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young was released.
1977More than 130 hostages held in Washington, D.C., by Hanafi Muslims were freed.
1978Palestinian guerrillas went on a rampage on the Tel Aviv-Haifa highway, killing 34 Israelis.
1985Mikhail S. Gorbachev was chosen to succeed the late Soviet President Konstantin Chernenko.
1990The Lithuanian parliament voted to break away from the Soviet Union and restore its independence.
1993Janet Reno was unanimously confirmed by the Senate to be the nation's first female attorney general.
1993North Korea withdrew from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
1997Rock musician Paul McCartney of the Beatles was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.
2002Two columns of light soared skyward from ground zero in New York as a temporary memorial to the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks.
2005A man being escorted to court for trial in Atlanta took a gun from a sheriff's deputy and went on a deadly rampage, killing four people, including a judge. (Brian Nichols was later found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without parole).
2006Former Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic was found dead of a heart attack in his cell during his war crimes trial in The Hague.

Current Birthdays

Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court justice
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia turns 75 years old today.
AP Photo/Peter Kramer
Terrence Howard, Actor
Actor Terrence Howard turns 42 years old today.
AP Photo/Evan Agostini
1931Rupert Murdoch, Media mogul, turns 80
1934Sam Donaldson, Broadcast journalist, turns 77
1946Mark Metcalf, Actor ("Animal House"), turns 65
1950Bobby McFerrin, Singer, turns 61
1950Jerry Zucker, Director, turns 61
1952Susan Richardson, Actress ("Eight is Enough"), turns 59
1953Jimmy Iovine, Head of Interscope Records, turns 58
1954Gale Norton, Former secretary of the interior, turns 57
1955Nina Hagen, Singer, turns 56
1962Jeffrey Nordling, Actor, turns 49
1963Alex Kingston, Actress ("ER"), turns 48
1965Wallace Langham, Actor ("CSI"), turns 46
1965Jesse Jackson Jr., U.S. congressman, D-Ill., turns 46
1968Lisa Loeb, Rock singer, turns 43
1971Johnny Knoxville, Actor ("Jackass"), turns 40
1979Benji Madden, Rock musician (Good Charlotte), turns 32
1979Joel Madden, Rock musician (Good Charlotte), turns 32
1980Dan Uggla, Baseball player, turns 31
1982Thora Birch, Actress, turns 29

Historic Birthdays

51Torquato Tasso 3/11/1544 - 4/25/1595
Italian poet of the late Renaissance
76John McLean 3/11/1785 - 4/4/1861
United States Supreme Court justice; dissented in the Dred Scott decision (1857)
78Joseph Bertrand 3/11/1822 - 4/5/1900
French mathematician and educator
70Charles Eastlake 3/11/1836 - 11/20/1906
English museologist and art writer
63Sir Malcolm Campbell 3/11/1885 - 12/31/1948
English car racer
84Vannevar Bush 3/11/1890 - 6/28/1974
American electrical engineer and goverment administrator in World War II
70Dorothy Gish 3/11/1898 - 6/4/1968
American film and stage actress
72Frederick IX 3/11/1899 - 1/14/1972
Danish king; encouraged resistance against Germans in World War II
89Lawrence Welk 3/11/1903 - 5/17/1992
American bandleader and showman
79Harold Wilson 3/11/1916 - 5/24/1995
English Labor Party politician; twice prime minister

Nausea y vomito después de anestesia general: revisión basada en la evidencia relativa a la evaluación de riesgos, prevención y tratamiento.


Nausea y vomito después de anestesia general: revisión basada en la evidencia relativa a la evaluación de riesgos, prevención y tratamiento.
Nausea and vomiting after surgery under general anesthesia: an evidence-based review concerning risk assessment, prevention, and treatment.
Rüsch D, Eberhart LH, Wallenborn J, Kranke P.
Klinik für Anästhesie und Intensivtherapie, Universitätsklinikum Gießen und Marburg GmbH.
Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2010 Oct;107(42):733-41. Epub 2010 Oct 22. 
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The German-language recommendations for the management of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) have been revised by an expert committee. Major aspects of this revision are presented here in the form of an evidence-based review article. METHODS: The literature was systematically reviewed with the goal of revising the existing recommendations. New evidence-based recommendations for the management of PONV were developed, approved by consensus, and graded according to the scheme of the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN). RESULTS: The relevant risk factors for PONV include female sex, nonsmoker status, prior history of PONV, motion sickness, use of opioids during and after surgery, use of inhalational anesthetics and nitrous oxide, and the duration of anesthesia. PONV scoring systems provide a rough assessment of risk that can serve as the basis for a risk-adapted approach. Risk-adapted prophylaxis, however, has not been shown to provide any greater benefit than fixed (combination) prophylaxis, and PONV risk scores have inherent limitations; thus, fixed prophylaxis may be advantageous. Whichever of these two approaches to manage PONV is chosen, high-risk patients must be given multimodal prophylaxis, involving both the avoidance of known risk factors and the application of multiple validated and effective antiemetic interventions. PONV should be treated as soon as it arises, to minimize patient discomfort, the risk of medical complications, and the costs involved. CONCLUSION: PONV lowers patient satisfaction but is treatable. The effective, evidence-based measures of preventing and treating it should be implemented in routine practice

Atentamente
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor

Book Revie


On the Cover of Sunday's Book Review

'The Tiger's Wife'

By TEA OBREHT
Reviewed by LIESL SCHILLINGER
In her first novel, Tea Obreht uses fable and allegory to illustrate the complexities of Balkan history, unearthing the region's pervasive patterns of suspicion, superstition and everyday violence.

Also in the Book Review

'The Social Animal'

By DAVID BROOKS
Reviewed by THOMAS NAGEL
The Times op-ed columnist David Brooks argues that people need to stop believing they have conscious control of their actions.
Gabrielle Hamilton at her restaurant, Prune.

'Blood, Bones and Butter'

By GABRIELLE HAMILTON
Reviewed by FRANK BRUNI
Gabrielle Hamilton, the chef at the New York restaurant Prune, tells of satisfying a variety of hungers in this memoir.
Maxine Hong Kingston

'I Love a Broad Margin to My Life'

By MAXINE HONG KINGSTON
Reviewed by DAVID ORR
The novelist Maxine Hong Kingston opts for poetry while taking a long look back in this 229-page free-verse memoir.

'Day of the Oprichnik'

By VLADIMIR SOROKIN
Reviewed by STEPHEN KOTKIN
In Vladimir Sorokin's dystopian tale, futuristic technology reinforces the draconian codes of Ivan the Terrible.

'Moonwalking With Einstein'

By JOSHUA FOER
Reviewed by ALEXANDRA HOROWITZ
A journalist who covered a memory championship gets a tutor, works at it and tries competing himself.

'The Executive Unbound'

By ERIC A. POSNER and ADRIAN VERMEULE
Reviewed by HARVEY MANSFIELD
The executive outranks the other coequal branches, a pair of law professors maintain. And we should learn to accept that.
HARLEM: A Century in Images256 pp. Skira Rizzoli/Studio Museum Harlem. $55. Richard Avedon, Dawoud Bey, Helen Levitt, Gordon Parks and Weegee are among more than 50 photographers represented in this chronicle of Harlem as a crossroads of art, culture and politics. Pictured,

'Harlem Is Nowhere'

By SHARIFA RHODES-PITTS
Reviewed by KAIAMA L. GLOVER
A Harlem transplant documents her own experiences there, and those of many others.

'Mr. Chartwell'

By REBECCA HUNT
Reviewed by TADZIO KOELB
Rebecca Hunt's humorous and amiable debut novel involves Winston Churchill, depression and a talking dog.
CRIME

A Trophy Wife's Tale

By MARILYN STASIO
Mystery novels by Walter Mosley, Cara Hoffman, Ian Rankin and Sara J. Henry.

Children's Books

Goodbye, sweet tooth:

Picture Books for Little Princesses

Reviewed by PEGGY ORENSTEIN
Three new books bring home the current market power of the color pink.

'Death Cloud'

By ANDREW LANE
Reviewed by GRAHAM MOORE
In this Y.A. novel, a 14-year-old Sherlock Holmes quells a possible outbreak of bubonic plague, duels a French baron and wins the affections of a rambunctious American girl.

'Strings Attached'

By JUDY BLUNDELL
Reviewed by DARCEY STEINKE
Judy Blundell offers another noirish thriller in which teenagers uncover the questionable actions of their elders and learn to form their own judgments.
CHILDREN'S BOOKS

'Cinnamon Baby'

By NICOLA WINSTANLEY
Reviewed by PAMELA PAUL
In this delicious modern-day fable, the scent of cinnamon has the power to cure a colicky baby.

Children's Bookshelf

By PAMELA PAUL
More children's books reviewed.