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NEUROMUSCULAR DISORDERS | 
enlarge | Authors: Anthony A. Amato, James A. Russell Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional Category: Book
List Price: $179.00 Buy New: $119.15 You Save: $59.85 (33%)
New (35) Used (12) from $102.74
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 197303
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 788 Shipping Weight (lbs): 5.4 Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 8.8 x 1.5
ISBN: 0071416129 Dewey Decimal Number: 616.744 EAN: 9780071416122 ASIN: 0071416129
Publication Date: May 6, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New Hardcover USA Edition, Never Use, May have a few slight scratches on the bookcover but it is still excellent condition, Ship within 1 day with delivery confirmation.
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Product Description
Everything you need to know about neuromuscular disease--in one concise, full-color volume "...this book will become an indispensable resource for clinicians involved in the diagnosis and management of patients with neuromuscular diseases, as well as for scientists working on the nature and pathogenesis of these disorders. It is a much-needed and welcome addition to the neurological literature and will rapidly gain acceptance as a standard work of reference."--Michael J. Aminoff, MD, DSc, FRCP, (from the foreword) Neuromuscular Disorders is comprehensive in scope, yet concise enough to serve as a valuable point-of-care guide for your day-to-day clinical practice. Grounded by numerous reference sources and enhanced by the experience of two seasoned clinicians, this text provides a pragmatic approach to the evaluation and management of neuromuscular disease. Here, in a single source, you'll get an insightful look at both nerve and muscle conditions, ranging from motor neuron diseases to neuropathies, neuromuscular junction disorders, and myopathies. The book opens with the clinical and laboratory approach to patients with neuromuscular disease, covering electrodiagnostic testing, nerve conduction studies, and muscle and nerve histopathology. With an emphasis on effective diagnosis and treatment, the substance of the text examines the full spectrum of specific neuromuscular diseases, giving you the “big picture” of the discipline in a way that no other text can match. FEATURES: - Convenient coverage of both nerve, muscle and neuromuscular transmission disorders--both primary and secondary neuromuscular diseases
- Specific disease sections encompass the range of conditions likely to be encountered in clinical practice, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, radiculopathies and plexopathies, mononeuropathies, various polyneuropathies, toxic myopathies, and dozens more
- The very latest diagnosis and treatment recommendations and protocols based on the most recent clinical literature and research
- Well-illustrated with EMGs, histopathology, and clinical photos
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| Customer Reviews:
Neuromuscular Disorders September 2, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
NEUROMUSCULAR DISORDERS Like the first reviewer, I purchased this book to help me organize my study for the new ABPN Neuromuscular Medicine boards. I think it is helping me do that. The book is well organized, fairly comprehensive and reasonably easy to read. It is not as good as Katirji, for instance. I think that is because two authors can't possibly be experts on every aspect of neuromuscular medicine. Despite that, it was a good effort for just two authors. I think the next edition will likely be better. My biggest beef was the editing. It is the most awful editing job I have ever seen in a medical text. Grammatical and spelling errors, omitted words, extra words, runned-together words, etc. In reading about 2/3 of the book so far I am easily into hundreds of errors. This is embarrassingly careless for McGraw-Hill and I wonder if they were pushing a deadline or something. Frankly, the errors are so frequent and annoying that it became somewhat distracting to read this book.
another review August 18, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I purchased this book due to my interest in neuromuscular medicine. I wanted a text that would provide a framework of diseases within the bailiwick of this sub-speciality to strengthen what I knew and develop a familiarity for entities I was not as well versed with. I thought that this would be a good book because of the fact the book is published in 2008, it was less than two hundred dollars, and that it was in a length that could be read in a reasonable time frame, as opposed to works edited by Katirji, Dyck, or Engel.
So I read it from cover to cover.
I must admit that I am more knowledgeable about the field than prior to the text and that I can look at a patient with a greater degree of sophistication than before. I also appreciated the references as I prefer to read the primary articles to reinforce my knowledge.
And now the bad.
This book would have benefited from one or two more attempts at editing prior to being published. I find that the text contradicts itself, that the factual data can be the opposite of generally accepted fact, and that the quality of the writing can be variable from chapter to chapter. Also, I was a little perplexed by the five to six different styles of referencing material (sometime erroneously citing the incorrect article), and once I saw two different varieties in the same sentence [page 635 column 1, paragraph 2, line 2].
I feel that I should provide several specific examples where I directly quote the text or infer the meaning of a table:
Table 2-3 on page 41 [infer]: no fibrillation potentials/positive sharp waves in motor neurone disease
Page 387, first full paragraph: Recall the disparity between the number of cervical vertebrae (seven) and nerve roots (eight) (Fig. 21-2). As a result, each numbered cervical nerve root is related to the immediate inferior bony level. For example, the C5 spinal root exits the spinal column between the fourth and fifth cervical vertebra, and it is vulnerable to compression from a herniated disk (herniated nucleus pulposus or HNP) between C5 and C6. The C6 spinal root exits the spinal column between the fifth and sixth cervical vertebrae and may be injured from an HNP between C5 and C6. In the same manner, an HNP between C6 and C7 levels may damage the C7 root, while an HNP at the C7 and C8 vertebral may impinge the C8 nerve root. The T1 spinal nerve exists between the eighth cervical and first thoracic vertebrae and may be damaged by an HNP at this level.
[If you do not find several errors with this paragraph, please break out your medical student anatomy text, even the pocket book you may still have will have this right. If you are just a logician and know nothing of the conventions of human anatomy, there are still two errors in this paragraph. I wonder who wrote it.]
Page 753, first full paragraph, line 2: Malignant hyperthermia is a medical emergency, requiring several therapeutic steps, and fibers with non-rimmed vacuoles.
[This is an example of the more frequent type of error.]
Page 601, first full paragraph, first line: Section about type III glycogenosis where the reader is referred to figure 26-1 to find the debrancher enzyme step on the glycolytic pathway, where it is not represented.
I will stop here....but the point is that I can go on for some time.
The person who can get most from this will be one who can read the material critically, so it should not be considered an introductory text to the field. Unless you are taking the neuromuscular medicine boards and want something that can be read in time (which is not me), I would wait until the next edition.
I have not accomplished anything like this book, and I realize it is an achievement, so I thank Drs. Amato and Russell.
great book July 6, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a great book for neurology residents trying to get a review of neuromuscular diseases, or even for attendings in neuromuscular disease looking to review and refresh. I plan to use it to study for the neuromuscular boards this fall. Great picutres of disease, pathology photos, tables for differential dx and up to date treatment recommendations. Overall, a book that fills a void in the neuromuscular market. There is a neuromuscular atlas by one of the coauthors that is also very good and they may work well together, but if money is tight and you're looking to just buy one, I think this one is more complete and thorough.
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