Buch, Englisch, 415 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 1006 g
ISBN: 978-3-319-18448-7
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Inpatient Dermatology is a concise and portable resource that synthesizes the most essential material to help physicians with recognition, differential diagnosis, work-up, and treatment of dermatologic issues in the hospitalized patient.
Complete with hundreds of clinical and pathologic images, this volume is both an inpatient dermatology atlas and a practical guide to day-one, initial work-up, and management plan for common and rare skin diseases that occur in the inpatient setting.
Each chapter is a bulleted, easy-to-read reference that focuses on one specific inpatient dermatologic condition, with carefully curated clinical photographs and corresponding histopathologic images to aid readers in developing clinical-pathologic correlation for the dermatologic diseases encountered in the hospital. Before each subsection the editors share diagnostic pearls, explaining their approach to these challenging conditions.
This book is structured to be useful to physicians, residents, and medical students. It spans dermatology, emergency medicine, internal medicine, infectious disease, and rheumatology. Inpatient Dermatology is the go-to guide for hospital-based skin diseases, making even the most complex inpatient dermatologic issues approachable and understandable for any clinician.Zielgruppe
Professional/practitioner
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Klinische und Innere Medizin Medizinische Diagnose und Diagnostik
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Klinische und Innere Medizin Dermatologie
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Medizinische Fachgebiete AINS Notfallmedizin & Unfallmedizin (inkl. Notdienste)
Weitere Infos & Material
Part I. Introduction.- 1. General principle in approaching hospitalized patient with a dermatologic issue.- Part II. General Medication Reactions.- 2. SJS/TEN.- 3. Drug hypersensitivity syndrome.- 4. Acute Generalized Exanthematous Pustulosis.- 5. Morbilliform Eruption.- 6. Urticarial drug eruptions.- 7. Serum-sickness-like reaction.- 8. Fixed Drug eruption.- 9. Drug-induced vasculitis.- Part III. Oncodermatology.- 10. Sweet syndrome.- 11. Pyoderma gangrenosum.- 12. Toxic erythema of chemotherapy.- 13. Graft vs host disease.- 14. Grover’s like reaction.- 15. Serpentine supravenous hyperpigmentation reaction.- 16. Miscellaneous chemotherapeutic reactions.- Part IV. Infections/Infestations.- 17. Bacterial.- 18. Viral.- 19. Fungal.- 20. Ectoparasitic.- Part V. Purpura.- 21. Vasculitis.- 22. Cholesterol Emboli.- 23. Endocarditis.- 24. Calciphylaxis.- 25. Vasculopathy.- Part VI. Erythroderma.- 26. GVHD.- 27. Psoriasis.- 28. Medication reaction.- 29. Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.- 30. Pityriasis Rubra Pilaris.- 31. Atopic derm.- Part VII. Autoimmune/Inflammatory.- 32. Lupus.- 33. Dermato.- 34. Sclero/Crest.- 35. Autoimmune blistering.- 36. Sarcoid/Lofgren.- 37. Erythema Nodosum.- Part VIII. Hospitalized-Related Lesions.- 38. Edema blisters.- 39. Stasis dermatitis.- 40. Miliaria.- 41. Intertrigo.- 42. Contact dermatitis.- 43. Steroid acne.