Accident and Emergency Radiology: A Survival Guide 3ed 2015

Description

Since it was first published, Accident and Emergency Radiology: A Survival Guide has become the classic in-my-pocket-reference and an indispensable aid to all those who work in the Emergency Department.

  • Ensure accuracy in reading and interpretation of any given image. Common sources of error and diagnostic difficulty are highlighted.
  • Prevent mistakes. Pitfalls and associated abnormalities are emphasized throughout.
  • Avoid misdiagnoses. Normal anatomy is outlined alongside schemes for detecting variants of the norm. Each chapter concludes with a summary of key points. Will provide a useful overview of the most important features in diagnosis and interpretation.
  • Easily grasp difficult anatomical concepts. Radiographs accompanied by clear, explanatory line-drawings.
  • Spend less time searching with an improved layout and design with succinct, easy-to-follow text. A templated chapter approach helps you access key information quickly. Each chapter includes key points summary, basic radiographs, normal anatomy, guidance on analyzing the radiographs, common injuries, rare but important injuries, pitfalls, regularly overlooked injuries, examples, and references.
  • Grasp the nuances of key diagnostic details. Updated and expanded information, new radiographs, and new explanatory line drawings reinforce the book’s aim of providing clear, practical advice in diagnosis.
  • Avoid pitfalls in the detection of abnormalities that are most commonly overlooked or misinterpreted.

Details Accident and Emergency Radiology

Accident-and-emergency-radiology-3ed-2015
  • Title: Accident and Emergency Radiology: A Survival Guide
  • Author: Nigel Raby, Laurence Berman, Simon Morley, Gerald de Lacey
  • Publisher: Saunders
  • Publication: 2015
  • Edition: 3
  • Language: English

Download PDF Accident and Emergency Radiology

  • Format: PDF
  • File size: 77.4 MB

Reviews

This book will provide essential reading and support to A&E trainees, medical students, radiology trainees, reporting radiographers and clinical nurse specialists, all of whom may be faced with trauma cases requiring accurate diagnosis and treatment.
— RAD Magazine Feb 2015

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