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Ingmar Rosén
Researcher at Lund University
Publications - 255
Citations - 14579
Ingmar Rosén is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cerebral blood flow & Electroencephalography. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 255 publications receiving 13656 citations. Previous affiliations of Ingmar Rosén include Malmö University.
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Prevalence of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome in a General Population
TL;DR: About 1 in 5 symptomatic subjects would be expected to have CTS based on clinical examination and electrophysiologic testing, which indicates symptoms of pain, numbness, and tingling in the hands are common in the general population.
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Models for studying long-term recovery following forebrain ischemia in the rat. 2. A 2-vessel occlusion model
TL;DR: By the use of intubation, muscle paralysis with suxamethonium chloride, and insertion of tail arterial and venous catheters, it was possible to induce reversible ischemia for long‐term recovery studies.
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Brain lactic acidosis and ischemic cell damage: 1. Biochemistry and neurophysiology.
TL;DR: It is concluded that a high degree of tissue lactic acidosis during brain ischemia impairs postischemic recovery and that different degrees of tissue nacreous acidosis may explain why severe incomplete ischemIA, in certain experimental models, is more deleterious than complete brain is chemia.
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Predictive value of early continuous amplitude integrated EEG recordings on outcome after severe birth asphyxia in full term infants.
TL;DR: The aEEG seems to be a feasible technique for identifying infants at high risk of subsequent brain damage who might benefit from interventionist treatment after asphyxia, and can predict outcome, with a high degree of accuracy, within the first six hours after birth.
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Standardized EEG interpretation accurately predicts prognosis after cardiac arrest
Erik Westhall,Andrea O. Rossetti,Anne Fleur van Rootselaar,Troels W. Kjaer,Janneke Horn,Susann Ullén,Hans Friberg,Niklas Nielsen,Ingmar Rosén,Anders Aneman,David Erlinge,Yvan Gasche,Christian Hassager,Jan Hovdenes,Jesper Kjaergaard,Michael A. Kuiper,Tommaso Pellis,Pascal Stammet,Michael Wanscher,Jørn Wetterslev,Matt P. Wise,Tobias Cronberg +21 more
TL;DR: Highly malignant EEG after rewarming reliably predicted poor outcome in half of patients without false predictions, and a benign EEG was highly predictive of a good outcome.