Hospital images: a clinical atlas (paperback) (series: hospital medicine: current concepts)
A Clinical Atlas

Hospital Medicine: Current Concepts Series, Vol. 1

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Language: English
Cover of the book Hospital images: a clinical atlas (paperback) (series: hospital medicine: current concepts)

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224 p. · 15.8x23.6 cm · Paperback

High quality, image-based casebook for hospital staff to improve diagnostic skills

Hospital Images: A Clinical Atlas is a unique visual guide for hospital-based physicians, medical students, and residents who want to hone their diagnostic skills. The book presents short cases in Board Review question format, which are accompanied by clinical images. These images include both examples of rare but important diseases, as well as classic images of common diseases.

Formatted for easy learning and quick referencing, Hospital Images presents more than 75 exemplary cases with over 100 associated photos.

Hospital Images offers:

  • Cases and images that hospital-based physicians and associated staff will see in their work

  • Consistent layout with full-color images and brief text for quick reference and study

  • Useful resources for education and general reference purposes

  • Broad coverage helpful for hospitalists, sub-specialists, medical students, nurses, and physician assistants

  • A wide range of images, including patient images, X-rays, computed tomography (CT) scans, electrocardiograms, blood smears, and pathology

Hospital Images is an essential, interactive atlas and clinical casebook useful on the wards and in the classroom.

Chapter 1. Bumps in the Night.

Chapter 2. ICU Anisocoria.

Chapter 3. Silver Man.

Chapter 4. Unanticipated Consequences.

Chapter 5. Fever in New Jersey.

Chapter 6. Intertriginous Erythema After Catheterization.

Chapter 7. New Headache.

Chapter 8. Hospital or Home?

Chapter 9. Septic Joint?

Chapter 10. Diffuse Calcification.

Chapter 11. More Calcification.

Chapter 12. Digital Distress.

Chapter 13. Deterioration After Stroke.

Chapter 14. Asymmetric Muscle Atrophy in an Immigrant.

Chapter 15. Common Things Being Common.

Chapter 16. Incidental Lymphocytes.

Chapter 17. Drumstick Digits.

Chapter 18. Elder Abuse?

Chapter 19. Desert Air.

Chapter 20. Colorful Confusion.

Chapter 21. Dyspnea Dilemma.

Chapter22. Unusual Ingestion.

Chapter 23. Drug, Rash, Eosinophils.

Chapter 24. Asthma, Eczema and New Rash.

Chapter 25. Swinging Heart.

Chapter 26. Share and Bulging Flanks.

Chapter 27. Staghorn Stones and Renal Air.

Chapter 28. Malar Rash and Fever.

Chapter 29. Red Tender Bumps and the Lower Extremities.

Chapter 30. Extreme Disease.

Chapter 31. Unusual Gingivitis.

Chapter 32. A Disabling Disorder.

Chapter 33. Common Disease, Uncommon Chest Radiograph.

Chapter 34. Fake Out.

Chapter 35. Widening Worries.

Chapter 36. Clever Clue.

Chapter 37. Cutis Extremis.

Chapter 38. Routine EKG?

Chapter 39. Eye to Diagnosis.

Chapter 40. Tick Talk.

Chapter 41. TB or Not?

Chapter 42. Big MAC.

Chapter 43. Blood Rings.

Chapter 44. Bread and Butter.

Chapter 45. Fever and Rash.

Chapter 46. Finger Points to Diagnosis.

Chapter 47. Symmetric Vasculitis?

Chapter 48. Disastrous Decline.

Chapter 49. Lytic Lesions.

Chapter 50. A Fall to Remember.

Chapter 51. Routine Procedure?

Chapter 52. Unusual Complication of Common Intervention.

Chapter 53. Of Bumps and Chylomicrons.

Chapter 54. Uncommon Triad.

Chapter 55. Plethora and Thrombosis.

Chapter 56. Blood Clues Rule.

Chapter 57. Back to the Mummies.

Chapter 58. Exopthalmos and Edema.

Chapter 59. Weight Gain, Visual Changes and Headache.

Chapter 60. Purple Urine in the Night.

Chapter 61. Think Again.

Chapter 62. Wiper Bite.

Chapter 63. Painless Nodules.

Chapter 64. Dermatitis with Dactylitis.

Chapter 65. Silent Night Ticks.

Chapter 66. Cutaneous Clue.

Chapter 67. Pus in a Tube.

Chapter 68. Left Upper Quadrant Prominence.

Chapter 69. Palms and Soles.

Chapter 70. Purplish Plaques.

Chapter 71. Air in There.

Chapter 72. Thinking Beyond the Obvious.

Chapter 73. Mid-Line Mystery?

Chapter 74. Desquamating Disease.

Chapter 75. November Cough.

Chapter 76.Small Bowel Significance.

Paul Aronowitz, MD, FACP, is Program Director for the Internal Medicine Residency at California Pacific Medical Center in Mill Valley, California, USA. He is also Associate Editor for the Society of Hospital Medicine's Journal of Hospital Medicine, as well as Deputy Editor for the Journal of General Internal Medicine.