Franklin Schiebel
West Virginia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Franklin Schiebel.
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1988
Luis Teba; Franklin Schiebel; Harakh V. Dedhia; Valerie Lazzell
The beneficial effect of dopamine in circulatory shock induced by tricyclic antidepressants (TCA) overdose may be decreased due to compromise of the endogenous stores of norepinephrine caused by TCA. The successful outcome of two cases of TCA overdose complicated by hypotension, unresponsive to an initial treatment with physostigmine fluid challenge and dopamine (greater than 15 micrograms/kg/min) but subsequently responsive to an infusion of norepinephrine is reported.
Critical Care Medicine | 1983
Robert E. Bowen; Harakh V. Dedhia; John Beatty; Franklin Schiebel; William Koss; Juan Granados
A 19-yr-old woman developed adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the postnatal period after treatment with dexamethasone and ritodrine for premature labor. An assay of complement activation was positive, suggesting a possible mechanism for this patients ARDS.
Critical Care Medicine | 1990
Luis Teba; Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel; Nancy G. Blehschmidt; William J. Lindner
The effect of positive-pressure ventilation (PPV) with PEEP on the release of alpha-atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) was investigated in both humans and an experimental model. In the human study, systemic artery blood samples from 22 critically ill patients were analyzed for ANP. Seventeen of these patients received PPV with different levels of PEEP (5 to 15 cm H2O). The remaining five patients were breathing spontaneously (0 PEEP). There was no significant difference in plasma levels of ANP obtained at different levels of PEEP, and no correlation between ANP vs. wedge pressure or CVP was found. For the experimental group, in six dogs a PEEP dose-response curve was established (PEEP 0, 5, 10, 15, 0 cm H2O every 45 min). Blood samples from pulmonary and systemic arteries were obtained for ANP determination, and urine and Na excretion were measured at the end of each period. Neither significant interaction between PEEP and ANP was observed, nor did levels of this peptide correlate with the decrease in cardiac output (p less than .05) and urine output (p less than .05), or with the increase in CVP (p less than .05) observed during PEEP. ANP concentrations in the pulmonary and systemic arteries were similar. In 14 human samples, ANP was determined by radioimmunoassay and radioreceptor assay systems, but the level obtained by both methods did not significantly correlate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Anesthesia & Analgesia | 1985
Luis Teba; Mostafa Zakaria; Franklin Schiebel
However, whether isoflurane does or does not cause hepatic injury was not the point of our article. Rather, we hoped to demonstrate that “hepatic injury after anesthesia with a halogenated anesthetic is not necessarily a consequence of that anesthetic . . . [and that] . . . repeated anesthesia with a halogenated agent in the presence of preexisting hepatic injury does not necessarily increase that injury.“ We continue to believe that our case illustrates these two points.
Chest | 1987
Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel
Chest | 1987
Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel
Critical Care Medicine | 1995
Barbara S. Mc Collum; Diane Dennis; Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel; Karen Cassidy; Kim Evans; Debra Thompson; John Brick
Chest | 1984
Luis Teba; Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel
Critical Care Medicine | 1998
Khalid Malik; Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel; Jane Channel
Chest | 1989
Harakh V. Dedhia; Franklin Schiebel; Luis Teba