Dr. Meg A Rosenblatt M.D.
Anesthesiologist
1 Gustave L Levy Pl Anesthesiology - Box New York NY, 10029About
Dr. Meg Rosenblatt is an anesthesiologist practicing in New York, NY. Dr. Rosenblatt ensures the safety of patients who are about to undergo surgery. Anestesiologists specialize in general anesthesia, which will (put the patient to sleep), sedation, which will calm the patient or make him or her unaware of the situation, and regional anesthesia, which just numbs a specific part of the body. As an anesthesiologist, Dr. Rosenblatt also might help manage pain after an operation.
Education and Training
New York Med Coll- Valhalla Ny 1985
Board Certification
AnesthesiologyAmerican Board of AnesthesiologyABA- Hospice and Palliative Medicine
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Strategies for minimizing the use of allogeneic blood during orthopedic surgery.
- Proficiency in interscalene anesthesia-how many blocks are necessary?
- Are subarachnoid catheters really safe?
- The educational effectiveness of problem-based learning discussions as evaluated by learner-assessed satisfaction and practice change.
- Interscalene regional anesthesia for shoulder surgery.
- Interscalene regional anesthesia for arthroscopic shoulder surgery: a safe and effective technique.
- A survey evaluating the training of anesthesiology residents in office-based anesthesia.
- Teaching ultrasound-guided interscalene blocks: description of a simple and effective technique.
- The ultrasound-guided supraclavicular-interscalene (UGSCIS) block: a case report.
- Management of the patient reporting an allergy to penicillin.
- Median arcuate ligament syndrome--a novel treatment using an intrathecal morphine pump to relieve intractable visceral pain.
- Ultrasound-guided supraclavicular block in a patient anticoagulated with argatroban.
- The safety and efficacy of regional anesthesia in an office-based setting.
- When is a single-injection nerve block not really a single injection?
- CASE 5 - 2008: Epidural Hematoma: when is it safe to heparinize after the removal of an epidural catheter?
Dr. Meg A Rosenblatt M.D.'s Practice location
New York, NY 10029Get Direction
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