Dr. John Light Atlee M.D.
Anesthesiologist
W309 N6698 Caddy Court John L. Atlee, M. D. Hartland WI, 53029About
Dr. John Atlee is an anesthesiologist practicing in Hartland, WI. Dr. Atlee 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. Atlee also might help manage pain after an operation.
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Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- The effects of the new antiarrhythmic E 047/1 on postoperative ischemia-induced arrhythmias in dogs.
- Diphenylhydantoin and lidocaine modification of A-V conduction in halothane-anesthetized dogs.
- The education of a physician in early nineteenth century.
- Cardiac rhythm management devices (part I): indications, device selection, and function.
- Cardiac rhythm management devices (part II): perioperative management.
- Case 1---2002---a patient with severe peripartum cardiomyopathy and persistent ventricular fibrillation supported by a biventricular assist device.
- Anesthetic management of the Prader--Willi syndrome.
- Evaluation of transesophageal atrial pacing stethoscope in adult surgical patients under general anesthesia.
- Cardiac assist devices. Technology and applications.
- Cardiac arrhythmias: drugs and devices.
- Early ambulation in surgery.
- Anesthetics and automaticity in latent pacemaker fibers. II. Effects of halothane and epinephrine or norepinephrine on automaticity of dominant and subsidiary atrial pacemakers in the canine heart.
- Anesthetics and automaticity in latent pacemaker fibers. III. Effects of halothane and ouabain on automaticity of the SA node and subsidiary atrial pacemakers in the canine heart.
- Prolongation of the QT interval by enflurane, isoflurane, and halothane in humans.
- Halothane, enflurane and isoflurane on abnormal automaticity and triggered rhythmic activity of Purkinje fibers from 24-hour-old infarcted canine hearts.
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