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دانلود کتاب acute medicine

دانلود کتاب داروی حاد

acute medicine

مشخصات کتاب

acute medicine

ویرایش:  
 
سری:  
ISBN (شابک) : 9781907904912 
ناشر:  
سال نشر: 2018 
تعداد صفحات: 786 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 5 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 46,000



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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب داروی حاد

طب حاد ویرایش دوم 2018


توضیحاتی درمورد کتاب به خارجی

Acute Medicine 2nd edition 2018



فهرست مطالب

Half Title
Other Titles
Full Title
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
01 - Resuscitation
	1.1 - Introduction
	1.2 - Initiating resuscitation
	1.3 - Basic Iife support: UK Guidelines 2015
	1.4 - Advanced life support: UK Guidelines 2015
	1.5 - Treatment of shockable rhythms (VF/pulseless VT)
	1.6 - Treatment of non-shockable rhythms (asystole/PEA)
	1.7 - Reversible causes of cardiac arrest
	1.8 - Resuscitation issues
	1.9 - Drugs for cardiac arrest
	1.10 - Special cases in resuscitation
	1.11 - Return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC)
	1.12 - Bradycardia management: be prepared to pace
	1.13 - Tachycardia management: be prepared to DC shock
	1.14 - Emergency DC cardioversion
	1.15 - Emergency pericardiocentesis
	1.16 - Automated implantable cardioverter defibrillator (AICD)
	1.17 - Adult choking algorithm
02 - The acutely ill patient
	2.1 - Levels of care
	2.2 - National early warning scores
	2.3 - Clinical risk and response
	2.4 - ABCDE assessment
	2.5 - Getting senior help: advice before you call for advice
	2.6 - Phone protocols
	2.7 - Advanced airways management
	2.8 - Tracheostomy/laryngectomy emergencies
	2.9 - Assessing and managing fluid balance
	2.10 - Fluid replacement regimens
	2.11 - Venous access: choosing a venous cannula
	2.12 - Acid–base balance and blood gas interpretation
	2.13 - Assessment of shocked patient
	2.14 - Immediate actions in a shocked patient
	2.15 - Quick review of different forms of shock
	2.16 - Acute heart failure/cardiogenic shock
	2.17 - Vasopressors and inotropes
	2.18 - Anaphylactic/anaphylactoid shock
	2.19 - Toxic shock syndrome
	2.20 - Hypovolaemic shock
	2.21 - Systemic inflammatory response syndrome/sepsis/severe sepsis
	2.22 - Haemorrhagic shock
	2.23 - Massive transfusion protocol
03 - Cardiology emergencies
	3.1 - Anatomy and physiology
	3.2 - Chest pain assessment
	3.3 - Chest pain differentials
	3.4 - Palpitations
	3.5 - Syncope and transient loss of consciousness (TLOC)
	3.6 - Differentials of syncope/transient loss of consciousness (TLOC)
	3.7 - Sudden cardiac death
	3.8 - Acute coronary syndrome
	3.9 - Stable angina
	3.10 - Arrhythmias
	3.11 - Tachyarrhythmias
	3.12 - Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia
	3.13 - Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (torsades de pointes)
	3.14 - Supraventricular tachycardia
	3.15 - Symptomatic bradycardia
	3.16 - Atrial fibrillation
	3.17 - Aortic dissection
	3.18 - Acute myocarditis
	3.19 - Acute pericarditis
	3.20 - Pericardial effusion/tamponade
	3.21 - Severe (malignant) hypertension
	3.22 - Infective endocarditis
	3.23 - Cardiomyopathy
04 - Respiratory emergencies
	4.1 - Pathophysiology
	4.2 - Oxygen therapy
	4.3 - Acute breathlessness
	4.4 - Acute stridor
	4.5 - Acute respiratory failure
	4.6 - NIV protocol and settings
	4.7 - Invasive ventilation
	4.8 - Massive haemoptysis
	4.9 - Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
	4.10 - Acute exacerbation of COPD
	4.11 - Acute severe asthma
	4.12 - Pneumothorax
	4.13 - Pleural effusion
	4.14 - Pneumonia
	4.15 - Pneumocystis pneumonia
	4.16 - Empyema
	4.17 - Pulmonary embolism and deep vein thrombosis
	4.18 - Lung ‘white out’
	4.19 - Lung abscess
05 - Endocrine and diabetic emergencies
	5.1 - Primary hypoadrenalism (Addisonian crisis)
	5.2 - Hypoglycaemia
	5.3 - Hyperkalaemia
	5.4 - Hypokalaemia
	5.5 - Hypercalcaemia
	5.6 - Hypocalcaemia
	5.7 - Myxoedema coma
	5.8 - Thyroid storm/thyrotoxic crisis
	5.9 - Pituitary apoplexy
	5.10 - Hyponatraemia
	5.11 - Hypernatraemia
	5.12 - Hypophosphataemia
	5.13 - Hyperphosphataemia
	5.14 - Hypomagnesaemia
	5.15 - Hypermagnesaemia
	5.16 - Lactic acidosis
	5.17 - Acute porphyria
	5.18 - Diabetic ketoacidosis
	5.19 - Hyperosmolar hyperglycaemic state (HHS)
	5.20 - Diabetic foot infections
	5.21 - Diabetes and surgery
	5.22 - Variable rate intravenous insulin infusion
	5.23 - Diabetes care in emergencies
06 - Gastroenterology emergencies
	6.1 - Acute diarrhoea
	6.2 - Constipation
	6.3 - Dyspepsia
	6.4 - Upper gastrointestinal bleeding
	6.5 - Lower gastrointestinal bleeding
	6.6 - Acute abdomen
	6.7 - Acute abdomen – surgical causes
	6.8 - Acute abdomen – medical causes
	6.9 - Gastric outlet obstruction/pyloric stenosis
	6.10 - Acute severe colitis
	6.11 - Clostridium difficile colitis
	6.12 - Intestinal obstruction
	6.13 - Acute colonic pseudo-obstruction
	6.14 - Acute bowel ischaemia
	6.15 - Acute diverticulitis
	6.16 - Re-feeding syndrome
	6.17 - Ingested foreign bodies and food impactions
07 - Hepatobiliary emergencies
	7.1 - Jaundice
	7.2 - Acute liver failure
	7.3 - Viral hepatitis
	7.4 - Alcoholic hepatitis
	7.5 - Alcoholic ketoacidosis
	7.6 - Alcohol abuse
	7.7 - Zieve’s syndrome
	7.8 - Delirium tremens/alcohol withdrawal
	7.9 - Decompensated cirrhosis, ascites and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
	7.10 - Hepatorenal syndrome
	7.11 - Hepatic encephalopathy
	7.12 - Chronic liver disease
	7.13 - Liver abscess
	7.14 - Gallstone disease and local complications
	7.15 - Acute cholangitis
	7.16 - Acute pancreatitis
08 - Haematological emergencies
	8.1 - Anaemia
	8.2 - Severe thrombocytopenia
	8.3 - Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
	8.4 - Disseminated intravascular coagulation
	8.5 - Sickle cell crisis
	8.6 - Haemolytic uraemic syndrome
	8.7 - Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
	8.8 - Bleeding disorders and reversal of anticoagulation
	8.9 - Bleeding on warfarin
	8.10 - Bleeding on heparin
	8.11 - Bleeding on direct oral anticoagulants
	8.12 - Bleeding on/after thrombolysis
	8.13 - Blood transfusion and blood products
	8.14 - Which blood/plasma product?
	8.15 - Cross-matching
	8.16 - Acute transfusion reactions
	8.17 - Indications for irradiated blood
	8.18 - Immunocompromised patients
	8.19 - Plasmapheresis/plasma exchange (PLEX)
09 - Infectious disease emergencies
	9.1 - Pyrexia of unknown origin
	9.2 - Assessment of the febrile traveller
	9.3 - Falciparum malaria
	9.4 - Traveller’s diarrhoea
	9.5 - Tick typhus
	9.6 - Rocky Mountain Spotted fever
	9.7 - Schistosomiasis (Katayama fever)
	9.8 - Dengue
	9.9 - Viral haemorrhagic fever
	9.10 - Chikungunya
	9.11 - Plague/tularaemia
	9.12 - Brucellosis
	9.13 - Pseudomonas infection
	9.14 - Q fever
	9.15 - Anthrax
	9.16 - Leptospirosis
	9.17 - Listeriosis
	9.18 - Botulism
	9.19 - Clostridial infection
	9.20 - Acute bacterial sepsis
	9.21 - Measles
	9.22 - Chickenpox/varicella zoster virus (Shingles)
	9.23 - Mumps infection
	9.24 - Herpes simplex 1 and 2
	9.25 - Infectious mononucleosis
	9.26 - Cytomegalovirus
	9.27 - Influenza
	9.28 - Severe acute respiratory syndrome
	9.29 - Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome
	9.30 - Zika virus infection
	9.31 - Needlestick injury
	9.32 - Tuberculosis (Mycobacterium tuberculosis)
	9.33 - HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
	9.34 - Syphilis
	9.35 - Oropharyngeal bacterial infections
	9.36 - Diphtheria
	9.37 - Lemierre’s syndrome (Fusobacterium necrophorum)
	9.38 - Meticillin sensitive/resistant Staph. aureus
	9.39 - Bacterial resistance: VRE, ESBL, CRE/CRO
	9.40 - Gastroenteritis and similar infections
	9.41 - E. coli infections
	9.42 - Staphylococcal food poisoning
	9.43 - Shigella dysenteriae
	9.44 - Enteric fever (typhoid/paratyphoid)
	9.45 - Bacillus cereus
	9.46 - Cholera
	9.47 - Giardiasis
	9.48 - Amoebiasis
	9.49 - Neurocysticercosis
	9.50 - Tetanus
	9.51 - Lyme disease
10 - Renal and urological emergencies
	10.1 - Pathophysiology
	10.2 - Haematuria
	10.3 - Reduced urinary output (anuria/oliguria)
	10.4 - Acute kidney injury
	10.5 - Chronic kidney disease
	10.6 - Urinary tract infection
	10.7 - Renal obstruction (obstructive uropathy)
	10.8 - Nephrolithiasis
	10.9 - Ischaemic priapism
11 - Neurological emergencies
	11.1 - Neuroscience and neuroanatomy
	11.2 - Clinical assessment
	11.3 - Patterns of weakness
	11.4 - Coma
	11.5 - Acute headache
	11.6 - Primary headaches
	11.7 - Secondary headaches
	11.8 - Acute delirium/confusion
	11.9 - Viral encephalitis
	11.10 - Rabies
	11.11 - Acute bacterial meningitis
	11.12 - Acute viral (aseptic) meningitis
	11.13 - Cerebral abscess
	11.14 - Septic cavernous sinus thrombosis
	11.15 - Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
	11.16 - Seizures: status epilepticus
	11.17 - Non-convulsive status epilepticus
	11.18 - Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
	11.19 - Cerebrovascular disease
	11.20 - Transient ischaemic attacks
	11.21 - Ischaemic stroke
	11.22 - Haemorrhagic stroke
	11.23 - Subarachnoid haemorrhage
	11.24 - Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome
	11.25 - Subdural haematoma
	11.26 - Epidural haematoma/head trauma
	11.27 - Guillain–Barré syndrome
	11.28 - Myasthenia gravis
	11.29 - Acute cord injury
	11.30 - Acute transverse myelitis
	11.31 - Acute dystonic reactions
	11.32 - Acute vertigo
	11.33 - Bell’s palsy/Ramsay Hunt syndrome
	11.34 - Acute demyelination
	11.35 - Acute peripheral mononeuropathy
	11.36 - Motor neurone disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)
	11.37 - Dementias
	11.38 - Acute hydrocephalus and shunts
	11.39 - Managing raised intracranial pressure
	11.40 - Cerebral oedema
	11.41 - Neurosurgical options
12 - Rheumatological emergencies
	12.1 - Septic arthritis
	12.2 - Osteomyelitis
	12.3 - Reactive arthritis
	12.4 - Acute gout and pseudogout
	12.5 - Rheumatoid arthritis
	12.6 - Trauma and fractures in elderly
	12.7 - Proximal femoral fracture
	12.8 - Fractured pubic ramus
13 - Ophthalmological emergencies
	13.1 - Acute visual loss
	13.2 - Red eye
	13.3 - Neuro-ophthalmology
	13.4 - Giant cell (temporal) arteritis
14 - Toxicology emergencies
	14.1 - Reduce absorption or increase excretion/elimination of toxins
	14.2 - Supportive management of specific issues
	14.3 - Intralipid therapy
	14.4 - (High dose) Insulin–glucose euglycaemic therapy
	14.5 - Amphetamine (‘speed’) and 3,4 MDMA (‘ecstasy’) toxicity
	14.6 - Beta-blocker toxicity
	14.7 - Benzodiazepine toxicity
	14.8 - Calcium channel blocker toxicity
	14.9 - Sodium valproate toxicity
	14.10 - Carbon monoxide toxicity
	14.11 - Cocaine toxicity
	14.12 - Local anaesthetic toxicity
	14.13 - Cyanide toxicity
	14.14 - Digoxin toxicity
	14.15 - Ethanol (C2H5OH) toxicity
	14.16 - Ethylene glycol toxicity
	14.17 - Methanol toxicity
	14.18 - Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB) toxicity
	14.19 - Insulin toxicity
	14.20 - Iron (ferrous sulphate) toxicity
	14.21 - Lithium toxicity
	14.22 - Monoamine oxidase inhibitors toxicity
	14.23 - Neuroleptics toxicity
	14.24 - Direct (novel) oral anticoagulants toxicity
	14.25 - Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) toxicity
	14.26 - Opioid/opiate toxicity
	14.27 - Organophosphate/carbamates toxicity
	14.28 - Paracetamol (acetaminophen) toxicity
	14.29 - Paraquat toxicity
	14.30 - Chloroquine/quinine toxicity
	14.31 - Salicylate toxicity
	14.32 - SSRI/SNRI toxicity
	14.33 - Tricyclic antidepressant toxicity
	14.34 - Theophylline toxicity
	14.35 - Body packers (‘mules’)
	14.36 - Cannabis toxicity
	14.37 - Sulphonylurea toxicity
	14.38 - Methaemoglobinaemia
	14.39 - Phenobarbital toxicity
	14.40 - Carbamazepine toxicity
	14.41 - Lead, arsenic, mercury, thallium (heavy metal) toxicity
15 - Medical emergencies in pregnancy
	15.1 - Medical problems in pregnancy
	15.2 - Pharmacology in pregnancy
	15.3 - Amniotic fluid embolism
	15.4 - Hypertension in pregnancy
	15.5 - Eclampsia and pre-eclampsia
	15.6 - Diabetes in pregnancy
	15.7 - Acute hepatobiliary disease in pregnancy
	15.8 - Diagnoses and management of liver disease in pregnancy
	15.9 - Pulmonary embolism and pregnancy
	15.10 - Acute severe asthma in pregnancy
	15.11 - Status epilepticus in pregnancy
	15.12 - Cardiac disease in pregnancy
	15.13 - Inflammatory bowel disease and pregnancy
16 - Oncological emergencies
	16.1 - Malignancy-related hypercalcaemia
	16.2 - Tumour lysis syndrome
	16.3 - Hyperviscosity syndrome
	16.4 - Brain tumour
	16.5 - Neutropenic sepsis
	16.6 - Malignant superior vena caval obstruction
	16.7 - Severe nausea and vomiting
	16.8 - Malignant spinal cord compression
17 - Miscellaneous emergencies
	17.1 - Abnormal gaits
	17.2 - Falls with no altered consciousness
	17.3 - Fat embolism
	17.4 - Air embolism
	17.5 - Refeeding syndrome
	17.6 - Accidental hypothermia
	17.7 - Malignant hyperpyrexia
	17.8 - Acute rhabdomyolysis
	17.9 - Painful leg
	17.10 - Acute limb ischaemia
	17.11 - Abdominal aortic aneurysm
18 - Dermatological emergencies
	18.1 - Introduction
	18.2 - Toxic epidermal necrolysis/Stevens–Johnson syndrome
	18.3 - Cellulitis/erysipelas, bites, surgery
	18.4 - Erythroderma (exfoliative dermatitis)
	18.5 - Severe (erythrodermic/pustular) psoriasis
	18.6 - Necrotising fasciitis
	18.7 - Other important rashes for acute physicians
19 - General management
	19.1 - Enteral feeding
	19.2 - Parenteral feeding
	19.3 - Pain management
	19.4 - WHO pain ladder
	19.5 - Using opiates and other analgesics
	19.6 - Venous thromboembolism prevention
	19.7 - Duties of a doctor
	19.8 - Medical errors, harm and duty of candour
	19.9 - Never events – events that should ‘never’ occur
	19.10 - Risk management and risk register
	19.11 - Duty of candour
	19.12 - Discharging patients safely
	19.13 - Self-discharge
	19.14 - Suicidal patients
	19.15 - Common law and Mental Health Act
	19.16 - Mental capacity
	19.17 - Managing opiate addicts
	19.18 - Driving and disease
	19.19 - Do not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DNACPR)
	19.20 - End of life care
	19.21 - Palliative care drugs
	19.22 - Roles and responsibilities after death
	19.23 - Death certification
	19.24 - Managing inpatients with pressure sores and ulcers
	19.25 - Rehabilitation, function and discharge
	19.26 - Drains and tubes
	19.27 - Surgical problems and referrals
20 - Procedures
	20.1 - Checks before any procedure
	20.2 - Venepuncture
	20.3 - Chest drain insertion
	20.4 - Central venous line insertion
	20.5 - Lumbar puncture
	20.6 - Abdominal paracentesis
	20.7 - Arterial blood gas
	20.8 - Nasogastric tube insertion
21 - Normal laboratory values
	21.1 - Clinical chemistry values
	21.2 - Haematology values
	21.3 - CSF values
22 - Emergency drugs (use with BNF)
	22.1 - Prescribing and side effects abbreviations
	22.2 - Antibiotic prescribing advice
	22.3 - Commonly used and emergency drugs
	22.4 - Important drug interactions and metabolism
	22.5 - Potentially fatal drug errors
	22.6 - Prescribing warfarin
	22.7 - Steroids
Index




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