Description
Book SynopsisSuitable for all those who work in the Emergency Department, this book offers step-by-step analytical approaches which help them to answer this question: "These images look normal to me, but... how can I be sure that I am not missing a subtle but important abnormality?"
Trade Review"It contains just the right amount of information to accommodate readers from trainees through to consultant or attending level; it can just as easily be used for revision as it can for reference". Reviewed by African Journal of Emergency Medicine , Jun 2015 "Since the publication of the first edition in 1995, this book has been essential reading for anyone working in the acute world of a casualty department. 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. It will [also] remind more senior clinical staff about some of the less frequent signs and principles relating to radiograph interpretation." Reviewed by RAD Magazine, Feb 2015
Table of ContentsBasic Principles Skull Face Shoulder Elbow Wrist and Distal Forearm Hand and Fingers Cervical Spine Thoracic and Lumbar Spine Pelvis Hip and Proximal Femur Knee Ankle and Hindfoot Midfoor and Forefoot Chest Abdomen Penetrating Foreign Bodies Swallowed Foreign Bodies Particular Paediatric Points Glossary