M
M. R. J. Sury
Researcher at Great Ormond Street Hospital
Publications - 25
Citations - 1133
M. R. J. Sury is an academic researcher from Great Ormond Street Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: General anaesthesia & Sedation. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 25 publications receiving 999 citations. Previous affiliations of M. R. J. Sury include Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust & UCL Institute of Child Health.
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Journal ArticleDOI
5th National Audit Project (NAP5) on accidental awareness during general anaesthesia: summary of main findings and risk factors†‡
Jaideep J. Pandit,Jackie Andrade,D.G. Bogod,J. Hitchman,W. R. Jonker,Nuala Lucas,Jonathan H. Mackay,A. F. Nimmo,Kevin C. O’Connor,E.P. O’Sullivan,Paul Ray,J.H.M.G. Palmer,Felicity Plaat,J. J. Radcliffe,M. R. J. Sury,H.E. Torevell,M. Wang,J. Hainsworth,Tim Cook,James Armstrong,Jonathan Bird,Alison Eddy,William Harrop-Griffiths,Nicholas Love,Ravi Mahajan,Abhiram Mallick,Ian Barker,Anahita Kirkpatrick,Jayne Molodynski,Karthikeyen Poonnusamy,Ramani Moonesinghe,David Weatherill,David A. Smith,Maddy Humphrey,Mary Casserly,Sharon Drake,J. Rangasami +36 more
TL;DR: It is recommended that an anaesthetic checklist, to be an integral part of the World Health Organization Safer Surgery checklist, is introduced as an aid to preventing accidental awareness.
Journal ArticleDOI
The State of UK anaesthesia: a survey of National Health Service activity in 2013
TL;DR: The low mortality rate supports the safety of UK anaesthetic care and numbers of patients managed by anaesthetists and details of 'who, when, what, and where' are surveyed, which should be valuable for planning and monitoring anaesthesia services.
Journal ArticleDOI
5th National Audit Project (NAP5) on accidental awareness during general anaesthesia: patient experiences, human factors, sedation, consent, and medicolegal issues
Tim Cook,Jackie Andrade,D.G. Bogod,J. Hitchman,W. R. Jonker,Nuala Lucas,Jonathan H. Mackay,A. F. Nimmo,Katherine W. O’Connor,Eoin P. O'Sullivan,Paul Ray,J.H.M.G. Palmer,Felicity Plaat,J. J. Radcliffe,M. R. J. Sury,H.E. Torevell,M. Wang,J. Hainsworth,Jaideep J. Pandit,James Armstrong,Jonathan Bird,Alison Eddy,William Harrop-Griffiths,Nicholas Love,Ravi Mahajan,Abhiram Mallick,Ian Barker,Anahita Kirkpatrick,Jayne Molodynski,Karthikeyen Poonnusamy,Ramani Moonesinghe,David Weatherill,David A. Smith,Maddy Humphrey,Sharon Drake,Mary Casserly,J. Rangasami +36 more
TL;DR: A novel approach to describing sedation from the patient's perspective is proposed which could be used in communication and consent for both sedation and anaesthesia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rapid inhalation induction in children: 8% sevoflurane compared with 5% halothane.
TL;DR: Assessment of patient struggling and parents' perceptions suggests that induction with sevoflurane was more pleasant than with halothane, which may allow more rapid induction of anaesthesia.
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A comparison of the recovery characteristics of sevoflurane and halothane in children
TL;DR: The recovery characteristics of sevoflurane and halothane anaesthesia were compared in 40 children aged 6 months to 6 years undergoing day case surgery and there were no major complications in either group.