Direct vision intracardiac surgery by means of a reservoir of "arterialized venous" blood; description of a simple method and report of the first clinical case.

[1]  R. Varco,et al.  Direct Vision Intracardiac Surgical Correction of the Tetralogv of Fallot, Pentalogy of Fallot, and Pulmonary Atresia Defects: Report of First Ten Cases , 1955, Annals of surgery.

[2]  R. Varco,et al.  The direct-vision intracardiac correction of congenital anomalies by controlled cross circulation; results in thirty-two patients with ventricular septal defects, tetralogy of Fallot, and atrioventricularis communis defects. , 1955, Surgery.

[3]  C. Lillehei Controlled cross circulation for direct-vision intracardiac surgery; correction of ventricular septal defects, atrioventricularis communis, and tetralogy of Fallot. , 1955, Postgraduate medicine.

[4]  C. Lillehei,et al.  Controlled cross circulation for open intracardiac surgery: physiologic studies and results of creation and closure of ventricular septal defects. , 1954, The Journal of thoracic surgery.

[5]  C. Lillehei,et al.  A quantitative study of the azygos factor during vena caval occlusion in the dog. , 1954, Surgery, gynecology & obstetrics.

[6]  W. Clark Topics in Physical Chemistry , 1952 .

[7]  A. Maximow,et al.  A Textbook of Histology , 1949 .

[8]  G. E. Cullen,et al.  A SIMPLE METHOD FOR OBTAINING CUTANEOUS (CAPILLARY) BLOOD FROM INFANTS AND ADULTS FOR COLORIMETRIC pH DETERMINATION , 1925 .

[9]  H. Warden,et al.  Experimental closure of interventricular septal defects and further physiologic studies on controlled cross circulation. , 1955, Surgical forum.

[10]  J. Meakins,et al.  Observations on the gases in human arterial and venous blood , 1920 .