Medical Imaging of Normal and Pathologic Anatomy - Elsevier eBook on VitalSource (Retail Access Card), 1st Edition
Elsevier eBook on VitalSource - Access Card
$36.99
Written for the modern medical student and designed to accompany any current gross anatomy textbook, this brand-new pictorial handbook presented by Drs. Vilensky, Weber, Carmichael, and Sarosi lets you quickly identify pathologic correlates of gross anatomy. Abundant side-by-side high-quality radiography, MR, CT, and ultrasound images of normal and pathologic conditions help you quickly develop the skills you need to differentiate between what’s normal and what’s not. Discussions on the choice of imaging modality for various pathologies will help you select the right imaging procedure in many clinical situations, making this a handy resource in the clinical environment. But best of all, this visual approach to pathologic correlates will help you ace your courses, the USMLE and NBME final exams.
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• Features side-by-side radiography, MR, CT, and ultrasound images that illustrate normal and abnormal anatomy, helping you quickly identify conditions while improving your diagnostic skills.
• Covers clinical conditions found in the main core of textbooks and radiologically depicts the clinical correlates that you’re exposed to daily, making it the ideal companion resource for any medical gross anatomy course.
• Uses concise, brief text that explains the condition, thus allowing the radiologic images to guide you to the differentiating factors.
• Incorporates discussions of imaging modality choices for a range of pathologies to help you understand how to select imaging procedures for various clinical situations in the clinical environment.
• Offers the visual guidance you need to study for and pass your exams.
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HEAD AND NECK
1. Hydrocephalus (MRI)
2. Cephalhematoma (CT)
3. Metastatic brain tumors (MRI)
4. Primary brain tumor (MRI)
5. Pituitary tumor (MRI)
6. Pineal gland cyst (MRI)
7. Papilledema—pseudotumor cerebri (MRI)
8. Vestibular-cochlear nerve schwannoma (MRI)
9. Acute epidural hematoma (CT)
10. Acute subdural hematoma (CT)
11. Chronic subdural hematoma (CT)
12. Meningioma (MRI)
13. Ischemic stroke (CT)
14. Internal carotid artery aneurysm (1) (angiogram)
15. Internal carotid artery aneurysm (2) (CT)
16. Carotid bifurcation plaque (CT)
17. Soft plaque, internal carotid artery (CT)
18. Maxillary and ethmoidal sinusitis (CT)
19. Asymmetry of the frontal sinuses (CT)
20. Blow-out fractures (CT)
21. Deviated nasal septum (CT)
22. Nasal bone fracture (CT)
23. Dislocation of the temporomandibular joint (MRI)
24. Degenerative joint disease, temporomandibular joint (CT)
25. Parotid gland tumor (CT)
26. Dilated submandibular duct with calculus (CT)
27. Mandibular fracture (Panorex)
28. Basal skull fracture (CT)
29. Pharyngeal mass (CT)
30. Tongue (lingual) cancer (MRI)
31. Enlarged deep cervical lymph nodes (CT)
32. Thyroid nodule (US)
33. Thyroglossal duct cyst (CT)
34. Goiter (enlarged thyroid gland) (US)
THORAX
35. Pectus carinatum (CT)
36. Pectus excavatum (CT/radiograph)
37. Pneumothorax (radiograph)
38. Pneumonia (radiograph)
39. Pulmonary embolism (CT)
40. Breast cancer (mammogram)
41. Breast cyst, breast cancer (US)
42. Mediastinal tumor (CT)
43. Mediastinal lymphoma (CT)
44. Aneurysm of the ascending aorta (radiograph/CT)
45. Situs inversus (radiograph)
46. Right aortic arch (radiograph)
47. Coarctation of the aorta (CT)
48. berrant right subclavian artery (CT)
49. Coronary artery disease (CT)
50. Aberrant right coronary artery (CT)
51. Coronary angioplasty (CT)
52. ortic valve stenosis (CT)
53. Atrial septal defect (ostium secundum) (MRI)
54. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (MRI)
55. Internal mammary (thoracic) artery coronary bypass (CT)
56. Pleural effusion (1) (radiograph)
57. Pleural effusion (2) (CT)
58. Emphysema (CT)
59. Lung cancer, radiography
60. Lung cancer, advanced, radiography
61. Lung cancer, right upper lobe (CT)
62. Large sliding hiatal hernia (radiograph)
63. Small sliding hiatal hernia (radiograph)
64. Esophageal varices (CT)
65. Diaphragmatic hernia (1) (radiograph)
66. Diaphragmatic hernia (2) (CT)
ABDOMEN
67. Metastases (CT)
68. Umbilical hernia (CT)
69. Inguinal Hernia (CT)
70. Caput medusae (CT)
71. Ascites (CT)
72. Abdominal adenopathy (MRI)
73. Abdominal aortic aneurysm (CT)
74. Psoas abscess (CT)
75. Carcinoma of gastro-esophageal junction (CT)
76. Duodenal ulcer (radiograph)
77. Ileal (Meckel's) diverticulum (fluoroscopy)
78. Hepatic cirrhosis (CT)
79. Splenomegaly (CT)
80. Renal cyst (simple) (CT)
81. Renal cyst (complex) (MRI)
82. Urolithiasis, renal calculus (CT)
83. Renal carcinoma (US/CT)
84. Adult polycystic kidney disease/transplant (MRI)
85. Adenocarinoma of the pancreas (CT)
86. Malrotation of the small bowel (radiograph)
87. Obstructed common bile duct (US)
88. Gallstones (US)
89. Volvulus (CT)
90. Appendicitis (CT)
91. Inflammatory bowel disease, regional enteritis, Crohn's disease (CT)
92. Ulcerative colitis (CT)
93. Urolithiasis, uteral calculi and dilated renal collecting system (CT)
PELVIS AND PERINEUM
94. Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy (CT)
95. Uterine fibroids (MRI)
96. Bicornuate uterus (MRI)
97. Ovarian cyst (US)
98. Ovarian dermoid cyst (teratoma) (CT/radiograph)
99. Urinary bladder diverticulum (CT)
100. Urolithiasis , bladder calculus (CT)
101. Varicocele (US)
102. Epididymitis (US)
103. Epididymal cyst (US)
104. Hydrocele (US)
105. Testicular tumor (US)
106. Testicular torsion (US)
BACK
107. Axis (C2) fracture (CT)
108. Cervical intervertebral disk herniation (MRI)
109. Degenerative joint disease, cervical facet joints (CT)
110. Vertebral body compression fracture (CT)
111. Fracture of the pars interarticularis (CT)
112. Spondylolisthesis (secondary to pars defect) (CT)
113. Degenerative spondylolisthesis (1) (MRI)
114. Degenerative spondylolisthesis (2) (MRI)
115. Infective discitis/vertebral osteomyelitis (CT)
116. Variation in the number of lumbar vertebrae (radiograph)
117. Sacroiliitis (CT)
118. Herniated lumbar disc with neural compression (MRI)
119. Lumbar spinal stenosis (MRI)
120. Complete transection of the spinal cord (MRI)
UPPER LIMB
121. Acromioclavicular (shoulder) joint separation (radiograph)
122. Anterior shoulder dislocation (AP view) (radiograph)
123. Anterior shoulder dislocation ("Y" view) (radiograph)
124. Fractured rim of glenoid fossa (CT reconstruction)
125. Rotator cuff (supraspinatus) tear (MRI)
126. Superior labrum, anterior to posterior tear (SLAP tear) (MRI)
127. Enlarged axillary nodes (CT)
128. Dislocated biceps brachii tendon (MRI)
129. Olecranon fracture (radiograph)
130. Fracture of the radial head (radiograph/CT)
131. Pronator teres muscle tear (MRI)
132. Scaphoid fracture (MRI)
133. Triangular fibrocartilage complex (tfcc; articular disc) tear (MRI)
134. Colles fracture (radiograph)
135. Smith fracture (radiograph)
136. Boxer's fracture (radiograph)
LOWER LIMB
137. Posterior hip dislocation with fracture of the acetabulum (CT)
138. Metatastic tumor of acetabulum (CT)
139. Hip (femoral neck) fracture (radiog