This unit of study examines the techniques available to monitor the function and wellbeing of the brain and nervous system during anaesthesia and surgery. Despite their widespread use, the effect of general anaesthetic agents on the brain and spinal cord is still poorly understood. There is wide interpatient variability in responses to these agents, and intraoperative haemodynamic fluctuations and underlying disease processes are all threats to the central nervous system which may be mitigated by careful monitoring.
Details
Academic unit | Clinical Neurophysiology |
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Unit code | CLNP5005 |
Unit name | Neuromonitoring in Anaesthesia |
Session, year
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Semester 2, 2021 |
Attendance mode | Online |
Location | Camperdown/Darlington, Sydney |
Credit points | 6 |
Enrolment rules
Prohibitions
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None |
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Prerequisites
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None |
Corequisites
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CLNP5001 |
Assumed knowledge
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This unit of study is primarily targeted at Medicine students. Science in Medicine students should contact the unit coordinator to discuss enrolment in this unit of study |
Available to study abroad and exchange students | No |
Teaching staff and contact details
Coordinator | Adam Hastings, adam.hastings@sydney.edu.au |
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Administrative staff | Amanda Wong (Education Design and Delivery Officer): amanda.wong@sydney.edu.au |