Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Meeting Abstracts|
September 1988
“VAPORIZER ABERRANCE” AND “SECOND GAS EFFECT”: WHICH IS CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT ?
Department of Anesthesiology - Saint-Antoine Hospital - 75012 PARIS - FRANCE
Anesthesiology September 1988, Vol. 69, A285.
Citation
H. DERIAZ, A. BENMAMOU, A. LIENHART; “VAPORIZER ABERRANCE” AND “SECOND GAS EFFECT”: WHICH IS CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT ?. Anesthesiology 1988; 69:A285 doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198809010-00284
Download citation file:
Citing articles via
Most Viewed
Related Articles
“VAPORIZER ABERRANCE” AND “SECOND GAS EFFECT”: WHICH IS CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT ?
Anesthesiology (September 1988)
VAPORIZER ABERRANCE INDUCED BY NITROUS OXIDE: SOLUBILITY OR VISCOSITY ?
Anesthesiology (September 1988)
Intraoperative Non–Record-keeping Usage of Anesthesia Information Management System Workstations and Associated Hemodynamic Variability and Aberrancies
Anesthesiology (December 2012)
Effect of N 2 O on Sevoflurane Vaporizer Settings during Minimal- and Low-flow Anesthesia
Anesthesiology (August 2002)