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Vladimir A Feshchenko

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Neuropsychobiology|September 15, 2004
Propofol-induced alpha rhythmVladimir A Feshchenko, Robert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel
Anesthesiology|September 28, 2004
Information loss over time defines the memory defect of propofol: a comparative response with thiopental and dexmedetomidineRobert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel, Vladimir A Feshchenko, et al.
Anesthesiology|August 2, 2002
A neuroanatomical construct for the amnesic effects of propofolRobert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel, Vladimir A Feshchenko, et al.
Anesthesiology|December 25, 2004
Propofol and thiopental do not interfere with regional cerebral blood flow response at sedative concentrationsRobert A Veselis, Vladimir A Feshchenko, Ruth A Reinsel, et al.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology|May 10, 2001
Midazolam decreases cerebral blood flow in the left prefrontal cortex in a dose-dependent fashionRuth A. Reinsel, Robert A. Veselis, Ann M. Dnistrian, et al.
Pageof 1

Showing results (1-10 of 5) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 1
Neuropsychobiology|September 15, 2004
Propofol-induced alpha rhythmVladimir A Feshchenko, Robert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel
Anesthesiology|September 28, 2004
Information loss over time defines the memory defect of propofol: a comparative response with thiopental and dexmedetomidineRobert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel, Vladimir A Feshchenko, et al.
Anesthesiology|August 2, 2002
A neuroanatomical construct for the amnesic effects of propofolRobert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel, Vladimir A Feshchenko, et al.
Anesthesiology|December 25, 2004
Propofol and thiopental do not interfere with regional cerebral blood flow response at sedative concentrationsRobert A Veselis, Vladimir A Feshchenko, Ruth A Reinsel, et al.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology|May 10, 2001
Midazolam decreases cerebral blood flow in the left prefrontal cortex in a dose-dependent fashionRuth A. Reinsel, Robert A. Veselis, Ann M. Dnistrian, et al.
Pageof 1