Description

Book Synopsis
Fundamentals of Small Animal Surgery offers a thorough introduction to the surgical principles essential to good veterinary practice. With many high-quality pencil drawings and clinical photographs to complement the detailed descriptions, the book is a useful resource for building basic surgery skills.

Trade Review
Clinical Pathology for the Veterinary Team will help experienced veterinary technicians set up various clinical laboratory diagnostic tests. It provides a good explanation of basic laboratory practices, the underlying concepts of many laboratory tests, and the physiology of common disease conditions. This book is well worth the price. (Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, December 2010) This book provides a good overall summary of basic clinical pathology in small animals. Although it is fairly short and concise, it contains all the necessary relevant information and includes a CD that takes readers thorough six complicated cases, step by step. This is a useful book that would be a handy reference to have in a practice. It is easy to read, concise, and informative. Although it is aimed at small animal veterinary teams, it includes limited information about large animal species, which is important for a good, general understanding. (Doodys, December 2010) Clinical Pathology for the Veterinary Team offers a fine recourse for technical team members involved in clinical diagnostic evaluation. Machinery calibration, normal anatomy, clinical diagnostics and more are revealed in chapters that provide key technical information for Obtaining and evaluating samples, surveying the disease process, the progress of identification and treatment, and including a DVD with interactive cases. Vet collections need this! (THE MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW, November 2010) Rosenfeld, a veterinarian who is associated with an education corporation that specializes in seminar training for the hospital team, and Dial (veterinary science and microbiology, U. of Arizona) provide a resource for technical veterinary team members performing clinical diagnostic evaluation in small animal lab work. (Book News, September 2010) ReviewUpdater-Profile_15@1326747466641

Table of Contents

Contributor List viii

Introduction xii
Margaret L. Campbell

Section 1 Communication Case Studies 1

Case 1.1 Comsmunicating about a Progressive Diagnosis and Prognosis 5
Julia A. Walch

Case 1.2 Diagnosis/Prognosis Uncomplicated Death at Home 12
Constance Dahlin

Case 1.3 Accommodating Religiosity and Spirituality in Medical Decision-Making 18
Jennifer Gentry

Case 1.4 Discussing Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation When it May Be Useful 26
Kelli Gershon

Case 1.5 Discussing CPR When it is a Non-Beneficial Intervention 33
Judy Passaglia

Case 1.6 Discussing Brain Death, Organ Donation, and Donation after Cardiac Death 41
Christine Westphal and Rebecca Williams

Case 1.7 Discussing Physiological Futility 52
Judy C. Wheeler

Case 1.8 Wounded Families: Decision-Making in the Setting of Stressed Coping and Maladaptive Behaviors in Health Crises 60
Kerstin McSteen

Case 1.9 Notification of an Expected Death 68
Peg Nelson

Case 1.10 Death Notification after Unexpected Death 73
Garrett K. Chan

Section 2 Symptom Management Case Studies 83

Case 2.1 Pain: Cancer in the Home 87
Constance Dahlin

Case 2.2 Treating an Acute, Severe, Cancer Pain Exacerbation 98
Patrick J. Coyne

Case 2.3 Pain and Advanced Heart Failure 104
Margaret L. Campbell

Case 2.4 Dyspnea and Advanced COPD 110
Margaret L. Campbell

Case 2.5 Dyspnea and Heart Failure 117
Garrett K. Chan

Case 2.6 Treating Dyspnea during Ventilator Withdrawal 128
Margaret L. Campbell

Case 2.7 Cough Associated with COPD and Lung Cancer 138
Peg Nelson

Case 2.8 Hiccups and Advanced Illness 145
Marian Grant

Case 2.9 Treating Nausea Associated with Advanced Cancer 152
Judy C. Wheeler

Case 2.10 Nausea Associated with Bowel Obstruction 161
Terri L. Maxwell

Case 2.11 Nausea Related to Uremia, Dialysis Cessation 168
Linda M. Gorman

Case 2.12 Opioid-Induced Pruritus 176
Richelle Nugent Hooper

Case 2.13 Pruritus in End-Stage Renal Disease 183
Linda M. Gorman

Case 2.14 Opioid-Induced Constipation 190
Grace Cullen Oligario

Case 2.15 Depression in Advanced Disease 198
Todd Hultman

Case 2.16 Treating Anxiety 205
Darrell Owens

Case 2.17 Terminal Secretions 213
Terri L. Maxwell

Case 2.18 Fungating Wounds and the Palliative Care Patient 220
Laura C. Harmon

Case 2.19 Pressure Ulcer Care in Palliative Care 229
Laura C. Harmon

Case 2.20 Treating Ascites 239
Darrell Owens

Case 2.21 Delirium Management in Palliative Care 247
Kerstin McSteen

Section 3 Family Care Case Studies 257

Case 3.1 Caring for the Family Expecting a Loss 259
Patricia A. Murphy and David M. Price

Case 3.2 Anticipatory Grief and the Dysfunctional Family 266
Rita J. DiBiase

Case 3.3 Acute and Uncomplicated Grief after an Expected Death 277
Rita J. DiBiase

Case 3.4 Bereavement after Unexpected Death 289
Garrett K. Chan

Case 3.5 Complicated Grief 300
Rita J. DiBiase

Index 309

Fundamentals of Small Animal Surgery

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£73.76

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £81.95 – you save £8.19 (9%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 7 Apr 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Fred Anthony Mann, Gheorghe M. Constantinescu, Hun-Young Yoon

3 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Fundamentals of Small Animal Surgery by Fred Anthony Mann

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 11/01/2011
    ISBN13: 9780781761185, 978-0781761185
    ISBN10: 0781761182

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Fundamentals of Small Animal Surgery offers a thorough introduction to the surgical principles essential to good veterinary practice. With many high-quality pencil drawings and clinical photographs to complement the detailed descriptions, the book is a useful resource for building basic surgery skills.

    Trade Review
    Clinical Pathology for the Veterinary Team will help experienced veterinary technicians set up various clinical laboratory diagnostic tests. It provides a good explanation of basic laboratory practices, the underlying concepts of many laboratory tests, and the physiology of common disease conditions. This book is well worth the price. (Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, December 2010) This book provides a good overall summary of basic clinical pathology in small animals. Although it is fairly short and concise, it contains all the necessary relevant information and includes a CD that takes readers thorough six complicated cases, step by step. This is a useful book that would be a handy reference to have in a practice. It is easy to read, concise, and informative. Although it is aimed at small animal veterinary teams, it includes limited information about large animal species, which is important for a good, general understanding. (Doodys, December 2010) Clinical Pathology for the Veterinary Team offers a fine recourse for technical team members involved in clinical diagnostic evaluation. Machinery calibration, normal anatomy, clinical diagnostics and more are revealed in chapters that provide key technical information for Obtaining and evaluating samples, surveying the disease process, the progress of identification and treatment, and including a DVD with interactive cases. Vet collections need this! (THE MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW, November 2010) Rosenfeld, a veterinarian who is associated with an education corporation that specializes in seminar training for the hospital team, and Dial (veterinary science and microbiology, U. of Arizona) provide a resource for technical veterinary team members performing clinical diagnostic evaluation in small animal lab work. (Book News, September 2010) ReviewUpdater-Profile_15@1326747466641

    Table of Contents

    Contributor List viii

    Introduction xii
    Margaret L. Campbell

    Section 1 Communication Case Studies 1

    Case 1.1 Comsmunicating about a Progressive Diagnosis and Prognosis 5
    Julia A. Walch

    Case 1.2 Diagnosis/Prognosis Uncomplicated Death at Home 12
    Constance Dahlin

    Case 1.3 Accommodating Religiosity and Spirituality in Medical Decision-Making 18
    Jennifer Gentry

    Case 1.4 Discussing Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation When it May Be Useful 26
    Kelli Gershon

    Case 1.5 Discussing CPR When it is a Non-Beneficial Intervention 33
    Judy Passaglia

    Case 1.6 Discussing Brain Death, Organ Donation, and Donation after Cardiac Death 41
    Christine Westphal and Rebecca Williams

    Case 1.7 Discussing Physiological Futility 52
    Judy C. Wheeler

    Case 1.8 Wounded Families: Decision-Making in the Setting of Stressed Coping and Maladaptive Behaviors in Health Crises 60
    Kerstin McSteen

    Case 1.9 Notification of an Expected Death 68
    Peg Nelson

    Case 1.10 Death Notification after Unexpected Death 73
    Garrett K. Chan

    Section 2 Symptom Management Case Studies 83

    Case 2.1 Pain: Cancer in the Home 87
    Constance Dahlin

    Case 2.2 Treating an Acute, Severe, Cancer Pain Exacerbation 98
    Patrick J. Coyne

    Case 2.3 Pain and Advanced Heart Failure 104
    Margaret L. Campbell

    Case 2.4 Dyspnea and Advanced COPD 110
    Margaret L. Campbell

    Case 2.5 Dyspnea and Heart Failure 117
    Garrett K. Chan

    Case 2.6 Treating Dyspnea during Ventilator Withdrawal 128
    Margaret L. Campbell

    Case 2.7 Cough Associated with COPD and Lung Cancer 138
    Peg Nelson

    Case 2.8 Hiccups and Advanced Illness 145
    Marian Grant

    Case 2.9 Treating Nausea Associated with Advanced Cancer 152
    Judy C. Wheeler

    Case 2.10 Nausea Associated with Bowel Obstruction 161
    Terri L. Maxwell

    Case 2.11 Nausea Related to Uremia, Dialysis Cessation 168
    Linda M. Gorman

    Case 2.12 Opioid-Induced Pruritus 176
    Richelle Nugent Hooper

    Case 2.13 Pruritus in End-Stage Renal Disease 183
    Linda M. Gorman

    Case 2.14 Opioid-Induced Constipation 190
    Grace Cullen Oligario

    Case 2.15 Depression in Advanced Disease 198
    Todd Hultman

    Case 2.16 Treating Anxiety 205
    Darrell Owens

    Case 2.17 Terminal Secretions 213
    Terri L. Maxwell

    Case 2.18 Fungating Wounds and the Palliative Care Patient 220
    Laura C. Harmon

    Case 2.19 Pressure Ulcer Care in Palliative Care 229
    Laura C. Harmon

    Case 2.20 Treating Ascites 239
    Darrell Owens

    Case 2.21 Delirium Management in Palliative Care 247
    Kerstin McSteen

    Section 3 Family Care Case Studies 257

    Case 3.1 Caring for the Family Expecting a Loss 259
    Patricia A. Murphy and David M. Price

    Case 3.2 Anticipatory Grief and the Dysfunctional Family 266
    Rita J. DiBiase

    Case 3.3 Acute and Uncomplicated Grief after an Expected Death 277
    Rita J. DiBiase

    Case 3.4 Bereavement after Unexpected Death 289
    Garrett K. Chan

    Case 3.5 Complicated Grief 300
    Rita J. DiBiase

    Index 309

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