Now in its 3rdedition, this appearance-based guide to dermatology makes it simple to recognise, diagnose, and treat a full range of dermatologic problems using visual clues. Whether your patient presents with a nail disorder, pigmented growth or mucous membrane condition, Principles of Dermatology puts convenient assistance at your fingertips. A logical, algorithmic organisation expedites diagnosis disorders are first divided into Rashes and Growths, and then further organised them by specific clinical features. For every skin lesion youll find concise discussions of clinicopathologic correlations, clinical features, and therapy options following each entry to facilitate treatment.Colour photographs and a graphic representations help you recognise each skin condition and distinguish it from other, similar-appearing dermatoses.Tables at the beginning of each chapter rank diseases according to frequency and highlight clinical features. Margin comments highlight key information throughout the text.Case studies at the end of each chapter demonstrate diagnostic and therapeutic decision making.Includes numerous new color photographsplus enlargements of many of the illustrations from the previous edition. "Therapy Tables" display treatment options at a glance. Updated references point the way to the best sources in the current literature.
I am a family medicine resident. My derm prof at UCSF recommended this when i was a student. It is a great intro to how to think about skin and guides you through a systematic approach to come up with a diagnosis, and then treatment is included too. Each chapter is based on the main morphological findings (erythematous rash vs. scaling vs. papules vs. pigmented lesions etc) to help you learn to THINK derm instead of just pattern recognition, which is what a derm atlas does. This is NOT a derm atlas (it is better), and once you master the concepts here a derm atlas is a good second text to have. good luck, derm is my nemesis but this book makes it easier in primary care --
good entry level
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Good over all but not indepth enough for what I really wanted, however for the boards it has all of the necessary info.
Basics for the Beginner
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
Today I finished the 2nd week of a four week rotation in derm, and I have read about 2/3 of the book. Our derm dept lends the book to us during the rotation, and recommends that we buy it for our own referrence afterwards. In my opinion the book is a well written overview of the common presenting derm complaints. The format is clear, and well thought out. The presentation of each condition includes brief sections on incidence, PE, DDx, Tx, and pathology. The pictures are good. The one weakness is that it could have more pictures. I am very happy with the text, and I am hard to please. I don't give it five stars because I never give anything five stars. It is a great book for med students rotating thru derm, and is even a good reference text for gen'l practitioners. Not sure if I'll shell out the bucks for the book though at this point--I still have to figure out how to pay for tuition, which was just raised by 5% for next (my final!)year.
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