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Jos J. Settels

Researcher at Edwards Lifesciences Corporation

Publications -  28
Citations -  2138

Jos J. Settels is an academic researcher from Edwards Lifesciences Corporation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Mean arterial pressure. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1872 citations. Previous affiliations of Jos J. Settels include University of Amsterdam.

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Non-invasive continuous finger blood pressure measurement during orthostatic stress compared to intra-arterial pressure.

TL;DR: For the assessment of the continuous blood pressure responses to orthostatic stress similar information can be obtained with non-invasive Finapres blood pressure recordings as with invasive recordings.
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Continuous non-invasive blood pressure monitoring: reliability of Finapres device during the Valsalva manoeuvre

TL;DR: In general, the Finapres device appears to offer a reliable alternative to intra-arterial blood pressure monitoring and reproduced intra- arterial patterns faithfully.
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Machine-learning Algorithm to Predict Hypotension Based on High-fidelity Arterial Pressure Waveform Analysis.

TL;DR: A machine-learning algorithm based on thousands of arterial waveform features can identify an intraoperative hypotensive event 15 min before its occurrence with a sensitivity of 88% and specificity of 87% Further studies must evaluate the real-time value of such algorithms in a broader set of clinical conditions and patients
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Nexfin Noninvasive Continuous Blood Pressure Validated Against Riva-Rocci/Korotkoff

TL;DR: Nexfin provides accurate measurement of BP with good within-subject precision when compared to RRK, and the latest development using this methodology is the Nexfin monitor.
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Effects of peripheral vasoconstriction on the measurement of blood pressure in a finger

TL;DR: Using noninvasive techniques only, the fall in mean pressure and the pulse amplification between brachial and finger arterial pressure were measured in six anaesthetised female subjects during surgery, finding that the difference tends to decrease with increasing constriction.