Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Åke_SenningÅke Senning - Wikipedia

    Åke Senning (14 December 1915 in Rättvik, Sweden – 21 July 2000 in Zurich, Switzerland) was a Swedish cardiac surgeon who worked at University Hospital of Zürich from 1961 until his retirement in 1985. Biography. Åke Senning was born to the Swedish veterinarian David Senning and the nurse Elly Senning, née Säfström.

  2. 30 de ene. de 2023 · Åke Senning (1915–2000) continued to develop the heart-lung machine, first based on a disc oxygenator, and later using rollers instead of discs (Figure 1). In 1951, after many animal experiments, he presented a paper on the limited use of the heart-lung machine at a congress in Paris.

  3. 2 de sept. de 2020 · Commentary: The genius of Ake Senning. In 1959, Ake Senning reported on the remarkable correction of transposition of the great arteries (TGA) using a so-called atrial inversion technique. It is perhaps the most difficult operation to describe but not particularly difficult to perform.

  4. The Senning procedure is an atrial switch heart operation performed to treat transposition of the great arteries. It is named after its inventor, the Swedish cardiac surgeon Åke Senning (1915–2000), also known for implanting the first permanent cardiac pacemaker in 1958.

  5. Dr. Senning's pioneering contributions to cardiovascular surgery will be an enduring legacy to humanity. He advanced almost every area of cardiac treatment, including open heart surgery, repair of congenital cardiac defects, pacemaker therapy, valve replacement, cardiac transplantation, and balloon angioplasty.

  6. 8 de oct. de 2015 · 4 min. El día 8 de octubre de 1958, en el Instituto Karolinska de Estocolmo (Suecia), el cirujano cardíaco Ake Senning implantaba el primer marcapasos interno de la historia.

  7. 26 de ago. de 2021 · INTRODUCTION. In 1959, Ake Senning from Sweden first published an ingenious technique for physiologic correction of transposition of great arteries (TGA), utilizing flaps of atrial wall to interchange the venous inflows into the two ventricles. [ 1] .