J
Jonathan C Knott
Researcher at University of Melbourne
Publications - 118
Citations - 2162
Jonathan C Knott is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Emergency department & Sedation. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 109 publications receiving 1842 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan C Knott include Royal Melbourne Hospital & Southampton General Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A randomised controlled trial of the effectiveness of soft silicone multi-layered foam dressings in the prevention of sacral and heel pressure ulcers in trauma and critically ill patients: the border trial.
Nick Santamaria,Marie Gerdtz,Sarah Sage,Jane McCann,Amy Freeman,Theresa Vassiliou,Stephanie De Vincentis,Ai Wei Ng,Elizabeth Manias,Wei Liu,Jonathan C Knott +10 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that multi‐layered soft silicone foam dressings are effective in preventing pressure ulcers in critically ill patients when applied in the emergency department prior to ICU transfer.
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Handover in the emergency department: Deficiencies and adverse effects
TL;DR: To determine problems resulting from ED handover, deficiencies in current procedures and whether patient care or ED processes are adversely affected.
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Randomized clinical trial comparing intravenous midazolam and droperidol for sedation of the acutely agitated patient in the emergency department
TL;DR: There is no difference in onset of adequate sedation of agitated patients using midazolam or droperidol in a double-blind, randomized, clinical trial set in the emergency department of a university teaching hospital.
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A prospective randomized study to evaluate the renoprotective action of beating heart coronary surgery in low risk patients
TL;DR: sensitive indicators revealed significant and similar injury to renal tubules and glomeruli following either OPCAB or ONCAB, suggesting that avoidance of CPB does not offer additional renoprotection to patients at low risk of perioperative renal insult during CABG.
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Intravenous Droperidol or Olanzapine as an Adjunct to Midazolam for the Acutely Agitated Patient: A Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial
Esther W. Chan,David Taylor,Jonathan C Knott,Georgina Phillips,David J. Castle,David C. M. Kong +5 more
TL;DR: Intravenous droperidol or olanzapine as an adjunct to midazolam is effective and decreases the time to adequate sedation compared with midazlam alone.