Tag: Thorax

Body Imaging Thorax and Abdomen Anatomical Landmarks, Image Findings, Diagnosis


Free Download Gabriele A. Krombach, Andreas H. Mahnken, "Body Imaging: Thorax and Abdomen: Anatomical Landmarks, Image Findings, Diagnosis"
English | 2018 | ISBN: 3132054119 | PDF | pages: 514 | 221.5 mb
Body Imaging: Thorax and Abdomen reflects the realities of your everyday work: it describes the principal anatomic landmarks so that you can orient yourself in the chest and abdomen with speed and confidence, interpret the findings, and make a diagnosis.

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The Thorax Medical, Radiological, and Pathological Assessment


Free Download The Thorax: Medical, Radiological, and Pathological Assessment
English | 2023 | ISBN: 3031210395 | 929 Pages | PDF (True) | 256 MB
The current medical practice has become more of a team effort rather than an isolated practice. The current evaluation of patients in the daily practice is essentially performed by medical assessment of the patient in question followed by diagnostic imaging, and when needed and possible the evaluation of tissue for diagnosis with its subsequent assessment of biomarkers and other ancillary tools that play an important role in the evaluation and prognosis. The book herein proposed will exactly provide such assessment focused in the thoracic assessment of patients afflicted with any particular disease of the thorax. Expert clinician in pulmonary medicine will provide the state of the art in the evaluation of such patients, which will provide the most important background in the clinical impression and further assessment of these patients. This assessment in most cases is followed by the evaluation of imaging, which provides a highly important information of not only the exact location of the process but also of the nature of whether is localized, infiltrative, diffuse, bilateral, etc., as well as the possible compromise of other adjacent structures. Such information is crucial as imaging and clinical information will provide a working diagnosis, which ultimately will be defined by the pathological assessment. Therefore, in real practice neither one of these subspecialties works alone or in isolation. On the contrary, each one depends on the other for the final diagnosis and proper management of patients with thoracic diseases. Based on such experience is that the current text will provide in the same text of the needed information that a clinician, radiologist or pathologist will need in order to arrive to the best possible conclusion.

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