cover image - Feigin and Cherry's Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 9th Edition
ISBN: 9780323827638
Copyright: 2025
Publication Date: 11-26-2024
Page Count: 3064
Imprint: Elsevier
List Price: $409.99

Feigin and Cherry's Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 9th Edition

by James Cherry, MD, MSc, Sheldon L. Kaplan, MD, Gail J. Demmler-Harrison, MD, William Steinbach, MD, Peter J Hotez, MD, PhD and John V Williams, MD

Hardcover

cover image - Feigin and Cherry's Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 9th Edition
ISBN: 9780323827638
Copyright: 2025
Publication Date: 11-26-2024
Page Count: 3064
Imprint: Elsevier
List Price: $409.99

$409.99

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Widely considered the premier text in pediatric infectious diseases, Feigin and Cherry's Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 9th Edition: 2-Volume Set, provides authoritative, up-to-date coverage of this rapidly changing field. Extensively revised by Drs. James Cherry, Sheldon L. Kaplan, Gail J. Demmler-Harrison, William J. Steinbach, Peter J. Hotez, and new editor John V. Williams, this two-volume reference delivers the information you need on epidemiology, public health, preventive medicine, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, treatment, and much more. It serves as a reliable, everyday resource for practicing ID specialists, and an invaluable reference for medical students, residents, and fellows in ID, pediatricians and internists, and others who work with neonates, children, and adolescents or in public health.
    • Discusses infectious diseases according to organ systems that may be affected, as well as individually by microorganisms, placing emphasis on clinical manifestations that may be related to the organism causing the disease.
    • Provides detailed information regarding the best means to establish a diagnosis, explicit recommendations for therapy, and the most appropriate uses of diagnostic imaging.
    • Includes expanded information on Q fever, antibiotic resistance and antibiotic agents, human coronaviruses, pox viruses, and infections in the compromised host, and contains new COVID-19 content across numerous chapters.
    • Features a new chapter on antimicrobial stewardship, and new coverage of antivirals for pox viruses.
    • Reflects today’s more aggressive infectious and antibiotic-resistant organisms as well as emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases.
    • Contains hundreds of full-color images (many are new!), including clinical photos, radiographic images, drawings, charts, and graphs.
    • Enhanced eBook version included with purchase. Your enhanced eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures, and references from the book on a variety of devices. Additional digital ancillary content may publish up to 6 weeks following the publication date.
  • INDEX

    1 Molecular Determinants of Microbial Pathogenesis
    2 Normal and Impaired Immunologic Responses to Infection
    3 The Host Response to Infections: The “-omics” Revolution
    4 Fever: Pathogenesis and Treatment
    5 The Human Microbiome
    6 Epidemiology and Biostatistics of Infectious Diseases
    SECTION 1 Upper Respiratory Tract Infections
    7 The Common Cold
    8 Infections of the Oral Cavity
    9 Pharyngitis (Pharyngitis, Tonsillitis, Tonsillopharyngitis, and Nasopharyngitis)
    10 Uvulitis
    11 Peritonsillar, Retropharyngeal, and Parapharyngeal Abscesses
    12 Cervical Lymphadenitis
    13 Parotitis
    14 Rhinosinusitis
    15 Otitis Externa
    16 Otitis Media
    17 Mastoiditis
    18 Croup (Laryngitis, Laryngotracheitis, Spasmodic Croup, Laryngotracheobronchitis, Bacterial Tracheitis, and Laryngotracheobronchopneumonitis) and Epiglottitis (Supraglottitis)
    SECTION 2 Lower Respiratory Tract Infections
    19 Acute Bronchitis
    20 Chronic Bronchitis
    21 Bronchiolitis and Infectious Asthma
    22 Pediatric Community-Acquired Pneumonia
    23 Empyema and Lung Abscess
    24 Children’s Interstitial Lung Disease and Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
    25 Cystic Fibrosis
    SECTION 3 Infections of the Heart
    26 Infective Endocarditis
    27 Infectious Pericarditis
    28 Myocarditis
    29 Acute Rheumatic Fever
    30 Mediastinitis
    SECTION 4 Central Nervous System Infections
    31 Bacterial Meningitis Beyond the Neonatal Period
    32 Parameningeal Infections
    33 Fungal Meningitis
    34 Eosinophilic Meningitis
    35 Aseptic Meningitis and Viral Meningitis
    36 Encephalitis and Meningoencephalitis
    37 Parainfectious and Postinfectious Demyelinating Disorders of the Central Nervous System
    38 Infection-Associated Myelitis and Myelopathies of the Spinal Cord
    39 Guillain-Barré Syndrome
    SECTION 5 Genitourinary Tract Infections
    40 Urethritis
    41 Cystitis and Pyelonephritis
    42 Renal Abscess
    43 Prostatitis
    44 Female Genital Infections
    SECTION 6 Gastrointestinal Tract Infections
    45 Esophagitis
    46 Approach to Patients With Gastrointestinal Tract Infections and Food Poisoning
    47 Clostridioides difficile Infection
    48 Whipple Disease
    SECTION 7 Liver Diseases
    49 Hepatitis
    50 Cholangitis and Cholecystitis
    51 Pyogenic Liver Abscess
    52 Reye Syndrome
    SECTION 8 Other Intraabdominal Infections
    53 Appendicitis and Pelvic Abscess
    54 Pancreatitis
    55 Peritonitis and Intraabdominal Abscess
    56 Retroperitoneal Infections
    SECTION 9 Musculoskeletal Infections
    57 Osteomyelitis
    58 Septic Arthritis
    59 Bacterial Myositis and Pyomyositis
    SECTION 10 Skin Infections
    60 Cutaneous Manifestations of Systemic Infections
    61 Roseola Infantum (Exanthem Subitum)
    62 Bacterial Skin Infections
    SECTION 11 Ocular Infectious Diseases
    64 Ocular Infections
    SECTION 12 Systemic Infectious Diseases
    65 Bacteremia and Septic Shock
    66 Fever Without Source and Fever of Unknown Origin
    67 Toxic Shock Syndrome
    SECTION 13 Infections of the Fetus and Newborn
    68 Approach to Infections in the Fetus and Newborn
    SECTION 14 Infections of the Compromised Host
    69 Inborn Errors of Immunity (Primary Immunodeficiencies)
    70 The Febrile Neutropenic Patient
    71 Opportunistic Infections in Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
    72 Infections in Pediatric Heart Transplantation
    73 Infections in Pediatric Lung Transplantation
    74 Opportunistic Infections in Liver and Intestinal Transplantation
    75 Infections in Renal Transplantation
    76 Infections Related to Prosthetic or Artificial Devices
    77 Infections in Burn Patients
    SECTION 15 Unclassified Infectious Diseases
    78 Kawasaki Disease
    79 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Systemic Exertion Intolerance Disease)
    SECTION 16 Bacterial Infections
    SUBSECTION I Gram-Positive Cocci
    80 Staphylococcus aureus Infections (Coagulase-Positive Staphylococci)
    81 Coagulase-Negative Staphylococcal Infections
    82 Group A, Group C, and Group G β-Hemolytic Streptococcal Infections
    83 Group B Streptococcal Infections
    84 Enterococcal and Viridans Streptococcal Infections
    85 Pneumococcal Infections
    86 Miscellaneous Gram-Positive Cocci
    SUBSECTION II Gram-Negative Cocci
    87 Moraxella catarrhalis
    88 Meningococcal Disease
    89 Gonococcal Infections
    SUBSECTION III Gram-Positive Bacilli
    90 Diphtheria
    91 Anthrax
    92 Bacillus cereus and Other Bacillus Species
    93 Arcanobacterium haemolyticum
    94 Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
    95 Listeriosis
    96 Tuberculosis
    97 Other Mycobacteria
    98 Leprosy and Buruli Ulcer: The Major Cutaneous Mycobacterioses
    99 Nocardia
    100 Corynebacterium and Rhodococcus
    SUBSECTION IV Gram-Negative Bacilli
    101 Citrobacter
    102 Enterobacter
    103 Extraintestinal Pathogenic Escherichia coli
    104 Diarrhea-Causing and Dysentery-Causing Escherichia coli
    105 Klebsiella
    106 Morganella morganii
    107 Proteus
    108 Providencia
    109 Shigella
    110 Serratia
    111 Salmonella
    112 Plague (Yersinia pestis)
    113 Other Yersinia Species
    114 Miscellaneous Enterobacteriaceae
    115 Aeromonas
    116 Pasteurella multocida
    117 Cholera
    118 Vibrio parahaemolyticus
    119 Vibrio vulnificus
    120 Miscellaneous Non-Enterobacteriaceae Fermentative Bacilli
    121 Acinetobacter
    122 Achromobacter (Alcaligenes)
    123 Eikenella corrodens
    124 Elizabethkingia and Chryseobacterium Species
    125 Pseudomonas and Related Genera
    126 Stenotrophomonas (Xanthomonas) maltophilia
    SUBSECTION V Gram-Negative Coccobacilli
    127 Aggregatibacter Species
    128 Brucellosis
    129 Pertussis and Other Bordetella Infections
    130 Donovanosis (Granuloma inguinale)
    131 Campylobacter Species
    132 Tularemia
    133 Haemophilus influenzae
    134 Other Haemophilus Species (ducreyi, haemolyticus, influenzae biogroup aegyptius, and parainfluenzae)
    135 Helicobacter pylori
    136 Kingella kingae
    137 Legionnaires’ Disease, Pontiac Fever, and Related Illnesses
    138 Q Fever
    139 Streptobacillus moniliformis (Rat-Bite Fever)
    140 Bartonella Infections
    SUBSECTION VI Treponemataceae
    141 Lyme Disease
    142 Relapsing Fever
    143 Leptospirosis
    144 Spirillum minus (Rat-Bite Fever)
    145 Syphilis
    146 Nonvenereal Treponematoses
  • James Cherry, MD, MSc, Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; Attending Physician, Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA, Los Angeles, California, Sheldon L. Kaplan, MD, Professor, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine; Attending Physician, Infectious Disease Service, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas, Gail J. Demmler-Harrison, MD, Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, Baylor College of Medicine; Attending Physician, Infectious Diseases Service, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas, William Steinbach, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, Robert H. Fiser, Jr., MD Endowed Chair in Pediatrics, Chair, Department of Pediatrics, Associate Dean for Child Health, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences; Pediatrician-in-Chief, Arkansas Children’s Little Rock, Arkansas, Peter J Hotez, MD, PhD, Dean, National School of Tropical Medicine, Professor, Pediatrics and Molecular Virology & Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine; Endowed Chair of Tropical Pediatrics, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas and John V Williams, MD, Professor and Chair, Department of Pediatrics and Microbiology & Molecular Genetics, Henry L. Hillman Professor of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine

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