G
Gillian R. Lauder
Researcher at University of British Columbia
Publications - 48
Citations - 875
Gillian R. Lauder is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vomiting & Outpatient surgery. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 48 publications receiving 791 citations. Previous affiliations of Gillian R. Lauder include St Mary's Hospital & Bristol Royal Hospital for Children.
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Total intravenous anesthesia will supercede inhalational anesthesia in pediatric anesthetic practice
TL;DR: The advantages of total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) have emerged and driven change in practice as mentioned in this paper, and these advantages will justify why TIVA will supercede inhalational anesthesia in future pediatric anesthetic practice.
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Neuropathic pain following multilevel surgery in children with cerebral palsy: a case series and review
TL;DR: It is the opinion that this complication should form part of informed consent for multilevel surgery and that anesthetists should be aware of this complication when managing postoperative pain control.
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Confronting the challenges of effective pain management in children following tonsillectomy.
TL;DR: This review outlines the safety issues and proposes a preventative multi-modal strategy to manage pain, nausea and vomiting without increasing the risk of post-tonsillectomy bleeding.
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Rectus sheath block: successful use in the chronic pain management of pediatric abdominal wall pain.
Adam Skinner,Gillian R. Lauder +1 more
TL;DR: This is the first report of the successful use of the RSB in the chronic pain management setting in children, carried out under general anesthesia as a daycase procedure and local anesthetic and steroids were used.
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An audit of pain management following pediatric day surgery at British Columbia Children's Hospital
Serena Shum,Joanne Lim,Trish Page,Elizabeth Lamb,Jennifer L. Gow,John Mark Ansermino,Gillian R. Lauder +6 more
TL;DR: Although good pain control was commonly achieved after surgery, improvements may be possible by increasing the use of multimodal analgesia, providing standardized written discharge instructions and using surgery-specific pediatric analgesia guidelines.