Ebook: Differential Diagnosis
- Tags: Diagnosis, Medicine, Internal Medicine, Bariatrics, Cardiology, Critical Care, Dermatology, Emergency, Endocrinology & Metabolism, Epidemiology, Family Practice, Gastroenterology, Geriatrics, Hematology, Hepatology, Infectious Disease, Nephrology, Neurology, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Occupational, Oncology, Osteopathy, Pathology, Pediatrics, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Psychiatry, Pulmonary, Radiology, Reproductive Medicine & Technology, Rheumatology, Urology, Medicine, Diagnosis, Clinical, Medicine, Medicine & Health Scie
- Series: Churchill’s Pocketbooks
- Year: 2014
- Publisher: Churchill Livingstone
- Edition: 4
- Language: English
- pdf
Making a correct diagnosis is one of the key aspects of every medical student's and junior doctor's clinical training, and problem-based learning is now widely used to focus on the causes behind the presentation of a clinical feature. The Fourth Edition of this best-selling book is packed full of information to help the reader move from a presenting problem to an accurate diagnosis.
- This Fourth Edition covers 127 common presenting problems in both medicine and surgery in a consistent format.
- Each topic includes a list of all potential causes of the condition, colour coded to indicate common, occasional or rare causes. Important geographical variations are also highlighted.
- Two sections cover the differential diagnosis of biochemical and haematological disorders which provide a ready check when reviewing abnormal results
- The text includes a targeted guide to the relevant general and specific follow-up investigations which should be carried out as appropriate.
- At the end of each topic a box highlights important learning points, or indicates symptom and signs suggestive of significant pathology which require urgent action.
- Eighty colour photographs of key clinical presentations have been added to assist symptom recognition.
- Two new chapters on Hypotension and Photophobia.
Download the book Differential Diagnosis for free or read online
Continue reading on any device:
Last viewed books
Related books
{related-news}
Comments (0)