About this event

  • Date and time Tue 22 Nov 2022 from 6:00pm to 8:05pm
  • Location Online
  • Organised by Critical Care Medicine

Tune into this webinar which will educate attendees from all grades about the most up to date and best practices when managing major intracranial events requiring intensive care support from a specialist neurological anaesthetist. By attending you will build your confidence in managing critical intracranial pathologies be it in a district general or tertiary centre.

The purpose of this meeting is to review the best practice of intracranial bleed and critical pathologies from an intensive care perspective. 

Benefits of attending:

  • Review the best practice of intracranial bleed and critical pathologies from an intensive care perspective 
  • Learn about medical optimization of patients with intracranial events prior to transfer 
  • Find out more about referral criteria to neurological centres 

 

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Agenda

View the programme

Welcome and introduction
Case vignette: “I’m young I’ve had a stroke?”

Dr Arabella Chapman, Anaesthetic Registrar, Barking, Havering and Redbridge University NHS Trust

Initial management of stroke in accident and emergency, priorities

Dr Sumita Choudhary, Consultant Stroke Medicine, Barking, Havering and Redbridge University NHS Trust

The anaesthetist role in mechanical thrombectomy

Dr Ross Hutchison, Consultant Neuroanaesthesia and Critical Care, Barking, Havering and Redbridge University NHS Trust

Ischaemic stroke and the neurosurgeon

Dr Lauren Harris, Neurosurgical Registrar, Barking, Havering and Redbridge University NHS Trust

Stroke and the intensivist

Dr Ahmer Mosharaf, Anaesthesia Services, Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust

Questions and answers
Closing remarks
Close of meeting

Location

Online

Registration for this webinar will close 1 hour prior to the start time. You will receive the webinar link 1 hour before the meeting. Late registrations will not be accepted.

Webinar recordings will be available for registered delegates up to 60 days after the live webinar, via Zoom. The link will be sent 24 hours after the webinar takes place.

This webinar will be recorded and stored by the Royal Society of Medicine and may be distributed in future on various internet channels.