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E-raamat: Surgery, eTextbook: Clinical Cases Uncovered

(King's College London), (University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Sep-2010
  • Kirjastus: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781444392999
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Sep-2010
  • Kirjastus: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781444392999
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Rehearse for life in clinical practice with this easy-to-use and unique series, which combines cases drawn from real-life experiences with a refreshing approach to presentations as you would see them in day-to-day situations. Get the most from clinical practice, with Clinical Cases Uncovered



Packed full with over 120 cases, this comprehensive title on the surgical management of conditions will be your core revision text.



Featuring everything you need to know on surgery, Professor Harold Ellis and Christopher Watson have left nothing out. Whether it's a gastric ulcer or an intercranial mass shown up on an MR scan, you can work your way through with Clinical Cases Uncovered.



For further information, visit www.clinicalcasesuncovered.com

Arvustused

"... represents excellent value for money for the scrub contingent." (Journal of Perioperative Practice, October 2010)

Its fantastic selection of photographs and diagrams certainly outshine most surgical review books. (Doody's Reviews, May 2009)

Preface x
Acknowledgments xi
How to use this book xii
Part 1 Basics
1(3)
Approach to the patient
1(3)
Part 2 Cases
4(252)
Postoperative dyspnoea
4(2)
Inside out
6(2)
A wound leak
8(3)
An inflamed neck
11(1)
Postoperative infection
12(2)
A sore neck
14(2)
Hidden infection
16(2)
Burnt thorax
18(4)
Burn treatment
22(1)
Lumps on the scalp
23(2)
A Lump on the wrist
25(1)
Recurrent abscesses over the sacrum
26(2)
A septic great toe
28(1)
A skin tumour
29(2)
Two old gentlemen with facial ulceration
31(2)
A pigmented spot on the face
33(2)
A Pigmented skin Lesion that Has got bigger
35(2)
Lump on the chest wall
37(2)
A patient with a chest drain
39(2)
A fatal lung disease
41(2)
A pulsating abdominal mass
43(3)
Abdominal bruising
46(2)
A painful calf
48(2)
Black toes
50(2)
A useful instrument in vascular surgery
52(2)
A young woman with cold hands
54(2)
A complication of varicose veins
56(2)
A chronic leg ulcer
58(3)
Another leg ulcer
61(2)
A cerbral mass on magnetic resonance imaging
63(2)
A cerbral vascular catastrophe
65(3)
A Baby with a large head
68(2)
A blow to the skull
70(1)
A severe head injury
71(2)
Another severe head injury
73(2)
A spinal abnormality in a newborn child
75(2)
Back injury
77(2)
A lacerated wrist
79(2)
A hand deformity
81(2)
A deformed finger
83(1)
A boy with a droopy eyelid
84(2)
A lump on the lip
86(1)
A white plaque on the tongue
87(2)
A baby with two gross congenital deformities
89(2)
A painful Submandibular swelling
91(2)
A lump over the angle of the jaw
93(2)
A patient with difficulty swallowing
95(2)
Another patient with difficulty in swallowing
97(3)
A third patient with dysphagia
100(2)
Heartburn
102(2)
Vomiting in a baby
104(2)
A gastric ulcer
106(2)
A bloody vomit
108(1)
An acute abdominal emergency
109(2)
A fateful vomit
111(2)
A serious gastric lesion
113(2)
A surgical specimen of stomach
115(2)
An acutely painful, distended abdomen
117(3)
Neonatal intestinal obstruction
120(1)
A very constipated small boy
121(2)
A painful distended abdomen in an old man
123(2)
An unusual case of severe rectal bleeding in a child
125(2)
An abdominal mass in a young man
127(2)
A striking and diagnostic facial appearance
129(2)
Acute abdomen in a medical student
131(2)
Yet another mass in the right iliac fossa
133(2)
A symptomless finding on a barium enema examination
135(2)
Ulcerative colitis
137(2)
A complication of longstanding ulcerative colitis
139(2)
A very old woman with an abdominal mass
141(2)
A patient with subacute obstruction
143(2)
A pathological anal verge
145(2)
A painful mass at the anal verge
147(1)
Another painful mass at the anal verge
148(2)
An agonizing anal verge
150(2)
A very painful buttock
152(2)
A patient with recurrent perianal sepsis
154(2)
A prolapsing anal mass
156(2)
An ulcer in the rectum
158(4)
An ulcer at the anal verge
162(2)
A large swelling in the groin
164(3)
A groin lump in an old woman
167(3)
A lump at the umbilicus
170(1)
A swelling in the abdominal wall
171(2)
A jaundiced and very ill patient
173(3)
A postmortem finding
176(1)
A man with a grossly swollen abdomen
177(2)
A massive haematemesis
179(4)
A schoolmistress with attacks of abdominal pain
183(2)
A collection of calculi
185(3)
A patient with jaundice and interesting physical signs
188(2)
The patient in Case 91 has surgery
190(2)
A giant abdominal mass
192(3)
A severe abdominal injury
195(2)
A painless lump in the neck
197(2)
Swollen legs in a young woman
199(2)
A frightened girl with a breast lump
201(2)
Breast screening
203(2)
An Ulcerating breast lesion
205(2)
A sinister break
207(2)
A woman with a sore nipple
209(2)
A painless lump in the neck
211(3)
A young immigrant with a lump in the neck
214(2)
A lump in the neck that moves on swallowing
216(3)
A woman with an obvious endocrine disease
219(3)
A mass of cervical lymph nodes
222(2)
A rapidly enlarging mass in the neck
224(1)
A patient with colic, and its endocrine underlying cause
225(3)
A girl with hirsutes
228(2)
Congenital disease of both kidneys
230(2)
Haematuria of sinister origin
232(2)
A gross congenital abnormality
234(1)
A bladder stone found at autopsy
235(2)
An insidius cause of lumbago
237(2)
A man with difficulty passing urine and with an interesting X-ray
239(2)
Sciatica with a sinister cause
241(2)
A patient with a very distended bladder
243(2)
A foreskin problem in a Child
245(1)
An Ulcerated prepuce
246(1)
A missing testis
247(2)
A swelling in the scrotum
249(2)
Two examples of testicular tumours
251(2)
A renal transplant recipient with a gastrointestinal haemorrhage
253(3)
Part 3 Self -assessment
256(33)
MCQs
256(7)
EMQs
263(5)
SAQs
268(2)
Answers
270(19)
Index of Cases by diagnosis 289(2)
Index 291
Harold Ellis, Emeritus Professor of Surgery, GKT Medical School, London, UK Chris Watson, Honorary Consultant Surgeon and Senior Lecturer, Addenbrooke's Hospital and Cambridge Medical School, UK