H
Hilde Pleym
Researcher at Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Publications - 40
Citations - 907
Hilde Pleym is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tranexamic acid & Coronary artery bypass surgery. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 37 publications receiving 756 citations.
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Gender differences in drug effects: implications for anesthesiologists
TL;DR: The gender aspect in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of anesthetics has attracted little attention and knowledge of previous work is required to decide if gender‐based differences in clinical practice is justified, and to determine the need for research.
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Single-dose tranexamic acid reduces postoperative bleeding after coronary surgery in patients treated with aspirin until surgery.
TL;DR: An effective inhibition of fibrinolysis was found in patients receiving tranexamic acid and reduces postoperative bleeding in coronary artery bypass grafting patients treated with aspirin until the day before surgery.
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Randomized clinical trial of topical tranexamic acid after reduction mammoplasty
TL;DR: The aim of this study was to investigate whether topical application of tranexamic acid to a wound surface reduces postoperative bleeding.
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Prophylactic treatment with desmopressin does not reduce postoperative bleeding after coronary surgery in patients treated with aspirin before surgery.
Hilde Pleym,Roar Stenseth,Alexander Wahba,Lise Bjella,Arve Tromsdal,Asbjørn Karevold,Ola Dale +6 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that desmopressin does not reduce postoperative bleeding in CABG patients treated with aspirin until the day before surgery.
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Comparison of three point-of-care testing devices to detect hemostatic changes in adult elective cardiac surgery: a prospective observational study
TL;DR: Evaluating the ability of the TEG, RoTEM and Sonoclot instruments to detect changes in hemostasis in elective cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass found significant changes and there were significant correlations postoperatively between plasma fibrinogen levels and variables from the three instruments.