05B4 Levitan, Richard - Jefferson Medical College - Thomas Jefferson University
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Richard M. Levitan, MD

Contact Dr. Levitan

1020 Sansom Street
Thompson Building, Suite 239
Philadelphia, PA 19107

(215) 955-6844
(215) 923-6225 fax

Most Recent Peer-reviewed Publications

  1. Video laryngoscopy, regardless of blade shape, still requires a backup plan
  2. Preoxygenation and prevention of desaturation during emergency airway management
  3. In reply
  4. The complexities of tracheal intubation with direct laryngoscopy and alternative intubation devices
  5. Use of a Battery-Operated Needle Driver for Intraosseous Access by Novice Users: Skill Acquisition With Cadavers
  6. Performance Failure of a Colorimetric End-Tidal CO2 Detector
  7. Light Intensity of Curved Laryngoscope Blades in Philadelphia Emergency Departments
  8. The mystique of direct laryngoscopy
  9. Stylet Bend Angles and Tracheal Tube Passage Using a Straight-to-cuff Shape
  10. Emergency airway management in a morbidly obese, noncooperative, rapidly deteriorating patient
  11. Design rationale and intended use of a short optical stylet for routine fiberoptic augmentation of emergency laryngoscopy
  12. Laryngeal View During Laryngoscopy: A Randomized Trial Comparing Cricoid Pressure, Backward-Upward-Rightward Pressure, and Bimanual Laryngoscopy
  13. Initial anatomic investigations of the I-gel airway: A novel supraglottic airway without inflatable cuff
  14. The importance of a laryngoscopy strategy and optimal conditions in emergency intubation [6] (multiple letters)
  15. Safety of succinylcholine in myasthenia gravis [4]
  16. Limitations of difficult airway prediction in patients intubated in the emergency department
  17. Laryngoscopy and morbid obesity: A comparison of the "sniff" and "ramped" positions
  18. The Combitube as rescue devi Recommended use of the small adult size for all patients six feet tall or shorter [5] (multiple letters)
  19. Alternating Day Emergency Medicine and Anesthesia Resident Responsibility for Management of the Trauma Airway: A Study of Laryngoscopy Performance and Intubation Success
  20. Patient safety in emergency airway management and rapid sequence intubation: Metaphorical lessons from skydiving
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