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Atlas of Dermatology in Internal Medicine is the only concise text-atlas to cover the most common and most important cutaneous manifestations of systemic disease in children and adults. It features more than 150 clinical photographs that are accompanied by format-driven, clinically focused text on the diagnosis and management of cutaneous manifestations of connective tissue, pulmonary, renal, GI, endocrine, malignant, infectious, and HIV disease. There is also a separate chapter on skin diseases commonly seen in the ICU. A special feature is its systematic coverage of clinically relevant dermatopathology. The book is a helpful tool for physicians and trainees in internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics, emergency medicine, and critical care medicine, as well as family, emergency, and critical care nurse practitioners.
Table des matières
Contents.- Preface.- List of Contributors.- 1.Cutaneous Manifestations of Connective Tissue Diseases.- 2.Cutaneous Manifestations of Pulmonary Diseases.- 3.Cutaneous Manifestations of Renal Disease.- 4.Cutaneous Manifestations of Gastrointestinal Disease.- 5.Cutaneous Manifestations of Common Endocrine Diseases.- 6.Cutaneous Manifestations of Internal Malignancy and Paraneoplastic Syndromes.- 7.Cutaneous Manifestations of Infectious Diseases.- 8.Cutaneous Manifestations of HIV Disease.- 9.Cutaneous Disorders in the Intensive Care Unit.
A propos de l'auteur
NéstorP. Sánchez, MD
Professor of Pathology and Dermatology and chairman
Department of Dermatology
University of Puerto Rico
Medical Sciences CampusSchool of Medicine
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Résumé
Atlas of Dermatology in Internal Medicine is the only concise text-atlas to cover the most common and most important cutaneous manifestations of systemic disease in children and adults. It features more than 150 clinical photographs that are accompanied by format-driven, clinically focused text on the diagnosis and management of cutaneous manifestations of connective tissue, pulmonary, renal, GI, endocrine, malignant, infectious, and HIV disease. There is also a separate chapter on skin diseases commonly seen in the ICU. A special feature is its systematic coverage of clinically relevant dermatopathology. The book is a helpful tool for physicians and trainees in internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics, emergency medicine, and critical care medicine, as well as family, emergency, and critical care nurse practitioners.