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Dive into the research topics where Morten Eriksen is active.

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Featured researches published by Morten Eriksen.


Colorectal Disease | 2005

Anastomotic leakage following routine mesorectal excision for rectal cancer in a national cohort of patients

Morten Eriksen; Arne Wibe; J. Norstein; J. Haffner; Johan N. Wiig

Objective  Mesorectal excision is successfully implemented as the standard surgical technique for rectal cancer resections in Norway. This technique has been associated with higher rates of anastomotic leakage (AL) and the purpose of this study was to examine AL in a large national cohort of patients.


British Journal of Surgery | 2004

Inadvertent perforation during rectal cancer resection in Norway

Morten Eriksen; Arne Wibe; Astri Syse; J. Haffner; Johan N. Wiig

Inadvertent perforation of the bowel or tumour is a relatively common complication during resection of rectal cancer. The purpose of this study was to examine intraoperative perforation following the introduction of mesorectal excision as a standard surgical technique in Norway.


British Journal of Surgery | 2005

Effect of hospital caseload on long-term outcome after standardization of rectal cancer surgery at a national level

Arne Wibe; Morten Eriksen; Astri Syse; Steinar Tretli; Helge E. Myrvold; Odd Søreide

The purpose of this prospective study was to examine the influence of hospital caseload on long‐term outcome following standardization of rectal cancer surgery at a national level.


Colorectal Disease | 2003

Total mesorectal excision for rectal cancer – what can be achieved by a national audit?

Arne Wibe; Morten Eriksen; Astri Syse; Helge E. Myrvold; Odd Søreide

Objective  The results of rectal cancer surgery in Norway have been poor. In a national audit for the period 1986–88, 28% of the patients developed local recurrence (LR) following treatment with a curative intent. Five‐year overall survival was 55% for patients younger than 75 years. The aim of this study is to report how an initiative focusing on better surgery can improve the prognosis for rectal cancer patients on a national level.


The Journal of Physiology | 1993

Fluctuations in blood flow to acral skin in humans: connection with heart rate and blood pressure variability.

Kristin Lossius; Morten Eriksen; Lars Walløe

1. Spontaneous fluctuations in blood flow in arteries supplying acral skin were investigated with Doppler ultrasound in human subjects. Finger blood pressure, heart rate (HR) and cardiac output were measured simultaneously and noninvasively. 2. Synchronous fluctuations in flow were found in arteries supplying the hands and feet. The fluctuations were larger and more rapid than the flow variations which have been demonstrated with other methods. The magnitude of the total flow fluctuations in the hands and feet was estimated to be 5‐10% of cardiac output in resting subjects. This range of flow fluctuations is made possible by spontaneous opening and closing of skin arteriovenous anastomoses (AVAs). 3. The fluctuations in skin blood flow were accompanied by inverse fluctuations in mean blood pressure (MAP). The power spectra of skin vascular conductance and MAP both contained maximum intensity at low frequencies, below 0.15 Hz, with high coherence. 4. The central circulatory events connected with the skin blood flow fluctuations were calculated from the experimental data with the use of transfer function analysis. There was a rise in HR, cardiac output and MAP starting 1‐4 s before a cutaneous vasoconstriction. This indicates that the HR and MAP responses are not only passive effects of changes in peripheral resistance, but are the result of a simultaneous activation of the peripheral vascular and cardiac efferent branches of the autonomic nervous system. The HR and MAP responses are then modified, probably by baroreceptor activation.


The Journal of Physiology | 1990

Dynamics and dimensions of cardiac output changes in humans at the onset and at the end of moderate rhythmic exercise.

Morten Eriksen; B. A. Waaler; Lars Walløe; Jarlis Wesche

1. An improved Doppler ultrasound technique was used to measure stroke volume (SV) and cardiac output (CO) on a beat‐to‐beat basis in a group of supine humans before, during and after periods of standardized, rhythmic exercise, involving the quadriceps muscle groups on both sides. The development of CO on such bouts of exercise was compared to Doppler ultrasound records of the simultaneous femoral arterial flow (FF) response. 2. Records of CO at rest revealed spontaneous fluctuations around a mean level, with differences between the minimal and maximal values of the order of 1 l min‐1. The mean CO level at rest again varied considerably from one day to another and from test run to test run. 3. Upon start of exercise an immediate and rapid increase in heart rate (HR) and CO took place. The entire increase, the size of which varied appreciably from test run to test run, was completed within 10‐15 s. No or only minor changes were seen in the mean SV level during the exercise periods. 4. The time course of the increase in FF was indistinguishable from that of the increase in CO, which occurred without any detectable delay relative to the changes in FF. These closely parallel developments indicate a tight regulatory coupling between the two types of flow changes. 5. In the majority of tests the total and two‐sided increase in FF seen in the steady‐state situation in the last part of an exercise period was significantly larger than the recorded increase in CO. This discrepancy implies that some redistribution of flow from tissues other than the working muscles might take place, even at this moderate level of work. 6. Upon the end of exercise a striking but transient increase in CO occurred, resulting from an increase in SV concomitant with a maintained HR. In the course of five to eight post‐exercise cardiac cycles about 100 extra milliliters of blood were expelled from the heart. This cardiac outflow overshoot was found to occur during a post‐exercise fall in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP).


British Journal of Surgery | 2011

Survival effect of implementing national treatment strategies for curatively resected colonic and rectal cancer

Bjørn S. Nedrebø; Kjetil Søreide; Morten Eriksen; Liv Marit Dørum; Jan Terje Kvaløy; Jon Arne Søreide; Hartwig Kørner

The surgical management of rectal cancer has changed substantially over the past decade. There are limited data on the long‐term outcome of implementing systematic management strategies.


Resuscitation | 2003

Quality of CPR with three different ventilation:compression ratios

E. Dorph; Lars Wik; Tævje A. Strømme; Morten Eriksen; Petter Andreas Steen

Current adult basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) guidelines recommend a 2:15 ventilation:compression ratio, while the optimal ratio is unknown. This study was designed to compare arterial and mixed venous blood gas changes and cerebral circulation and oxygen delivery with ventilation:compression ratios of 2:15, 2:50 and 5:50 in a model of basic CPR. Ventricular fibrillation (VF) was induced in 12 anaesthetised pigs, and satisfactory recordings were obtained from 9 of them. A non-intervention interval of 3 min was followed by CPR with pauses in compressions for ventilation with 17% oxygen and 4% carbon dioxide in a randomised, cross-over design with each method being used for 5 min. Pulmonary gas exchange was clearly superior with a ventilation:compression ratio of 2:15. While the arterial oxygen saturation stayed above 80% throughout CPR for 2:15, it dropped below 40% during part of the ventilation:compression cycle for both the other two ratios. On the other hand, the ratio 2:50 produced 30% more chest compressions per minute than either of the two other methods. This resulted in a mean carotid flow that was significantly higher with the ratio of 2:50 than with 5:50 while 2:15 was not significantly different from either. The mean cerebrocortical microcirculation was approximately 37% of pre-VF levels during compression cycles alone with no significant differences between the methods. The oxygen delivery to the brain was higher for the ratio of 2:15 than for either 5:50 or 2:50. In parallel the central venous oxygenation, which gives some indication of tissue oxygenation, was higher for the ratio of 2:15 than for both 5:50 and 2:50. As the compressions were done with a mechanical device with only 2-3 s pauses per ventilation, the data cannot be extrapolated to laypersons who have great variations in quality of CPR. However, it might seem reasonable to suggest that basic CPR by professionals should continue with ratio of 2:15 at present if it can be shown that similar brief pauses for ventilation can be achieved in clinical practice.


Resuscitation | 2001

Reducing CPR artefacts in ventricular fibrillation in vitro

Trygve Eftestøl; Helge Myklebust; Morten Eriksen; Bjørn Terje Holten; Petter Andreas Steen

CPR creates artefacts on the ECG, and a pause in CPR is therefore mandatory during rhythm analysis. This hands-off interval is harmful to the already marginally circulated tissues during CPR, and if the artefacts could be removed by filtering, the rhythm could be analyzed during ongoing CPR. Fixed coefficient filters used in animals cannot solve this problem in humans, due to overlapping frequency spectra for artefacts and VF signals. In the present study, we established a method for mixing CPR-artefacts (noise) from a pig with human VF (signal) at various signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) from -10 dB to +10 dB. We then developed a new methodology for removing CPR artefacts by applying a digital adaptive filter, and compared the results with this filter to that of a fixed coefficient filter. The results with the adaptive filter clearly outperformed the fixed coefficient filter for all SNR levels. At an original SNR of 0 dB, the restored SNRs were 9.0+/-0.7 dB versus 0.9+/-0.7 dB respectively (P<0.0001).


Early Human Development | 1999

Development of oxygen sensitivity in infants of smoking and non-smoking mothers.

Signe Søvik; Kristin Lossius; Morten Eriksen; Jens Grøgaard; Lars Walløe

AIMS To assess the effect of prenatal cigarette smoke exposure on the postnatal resetting of oxygen sensitivity in term infants. METHODS 15 healthy term infants of smoking mothers (median 10 cigarettes/day) and 16 controls were studied during quiet sleep 1, 3, and 10 days and 10 weeks postnatally. Strain-gauge respiratory trace was continuously recorded. Repeated 15-s challenges with 100% O2 and 15% O2 were presented in randomised order through a face mask. A median of six hyperoxic and six hypoxic challenges per recording were obtained. Breath-by-breath ventilation in a time-window from 20 s before onset of stimulus to 60 s after was extracted. For each infant at each age, the normalised coherently averaged response to hyperoxia and hypoxia was calculated. Mean ventilation at end of the 15-s stimulus was analysed with ANOVA, as were parameters describing a function fitted to each averaged response. RESULTS During air breathing, smoke-exposed infants had higher respiratory rates and lower tidal volumes than controls. Nicotine concentration in infant hair, measured by gas chromatography, was positively correlated with maternal level of smoking. A long-term development in oxygen sensitivity was demonstrated in both groups. However, neither the time-course nor the magnitude of O2 responses was affected by maternal smoking. Overall, hyperoxia reduced ventilation by 6.3% at day 1, 13.2% at day 3, 29.6% at day 10, and 40.0% at week 10. Transient hypoxia increased ventilation by 3.5%, 3.2%, 6.4%, and 8.8%, respectively, at the four ages studied.

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Lars Wik

Oslo University Hospital

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Helge Skulstad

Oslo University Hospital

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Arne Wibe

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Espen W. Remme

Oslo University Hospital

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