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Automated Drug Delivery in Anesthesia

  • Book

  • April 2020
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 4858507

Automated Drug Delivery in Anesthesia provides a full review of available tools and methods on the drug delivery of anesthesia, bridging the gap between academic development, research and clinical practice. The book takes an interdisciplinary approach, pulling information about tools developed in other disciplines such as mathematics, physics, biology and system engineering and applying them to drug delivery. The book's authors discuss the missing element of complete regulatory loop of anesthesia: the sensor and model for pain pathway assessment. This is the only book which focuses specifically on the delivery of anesthesia.

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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. An overview of computer-guided total intravenous anesthesia and monitoring devices-drug infusion control strategies and analgesia assessment in clinical use and research
  3. A non-Newtonian impedance measurement experimental framework: modeling and control inside blood-like environments-fractional-order modeling and control of a targeted drug delivery prototype with impedance measurement capabilities
  4. A multiscale pathway paradigm for pain characterization
  5. Models for control of intravenous anesthesia
  6. Modeling and control of neuromuscular blockade level in general anesthesia
  7. Computer-guided control of the complete anesthesia
  8. Paradigm Optimization-based design of closed-loop control of anesthesia
  9. Integrative cybermedical systems for computer-based drug delivery

Authors

Dana Copot FWO Post-doctoral researcher, Research Group on Dynamical Systems and Control (DySC), Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium. Dr. Dana Copot is the holder of the prestigious Flanders Research Foundation postdoctoral fellowship at Ghent University (FWO-UGent). She received the bachelor and master's degree in chemical engineering in 2010 and 2012 respectively, from Gh. Asachi Technical University of Iasi, Romania. In 2018 she received her doctoral degree from Ghent University in the field of biomedical engineering. Her doctoral research includes developing models for characterizing properties in biological tissues.