1. Imaging the Head and Brain
2. Imaging the Face 3. Imaging the Cervical, Thoracic, and Lumbar
Spine 4. Imaging Soft Tissues of the Neck 5. Imaging the Chest: The
Chest Radiograph 6. Imaging Chest Trauma 7. Imaging of Pulmonary
Embolism and Nontraumatic Aortic Pathology 8. Cardiac Computed
Tomography (abstract for online chapter)
9. Imaging of Nontraumatic Abdominal Conditions 10. Imaging
Abdominal and Flank Trauma Vascular Catastrophes 12. Imaging the
Genitourinary Tract 13. Imaging of the Pelvis and Hip 14. Imaging
the Extremities 15. Emergency Department Applications of
Musculoskeletal Magnetic Resonance Imaging: An Evidence-Based
Assessment (abstract for online chapter) Imaging": Image-Guided
Therapies in Emergency Medicine (abstract for online chapter)
1. Imaging the Head and Brain 2. Imaging the Face 3. Imaging the Cervical, Thoracic, and Lumbar Spine 4. Imaging Soft Tissues of the Neck 5. Imaging the Chest: The Chest Radiograph 6. Imaging Chest Trauma 7. Imaging of Pulmonary Embolism and Nontraumatic Aortic Pathology 8. Cardiac Computed Tomography (abstract for online chapter) 9. Imaging of Nontraumatic Abdominal Conditions 10. Imaging Abdominal and Flank Trauma Vascular Catastrophes 12. Imaging the Genitourinary Tract 13. Imaging of the Pelvis and Hip 14. Imaging the Extremities 15. Emergency Department Applications of Musculoskeletal Magnetic Resonance Imaging: An Evidence-Based Assessment (abstract for online chapter) Imaging": Image-Guided Therapies in Emergency Medicine (abstract for online chapter)
Winner, 2011 PROSE Award for Excellence for the best new
publication in Clinical Medicine! The PROSE Awards annually
recognize the very best in professional and scholarly publishing by
presenting more than 45 awards to distinguished books, reference
works, journals and electronic content each year.
"I have no doubt that this text is destined to become one of our
specialty's landmark textbooks, a classic that will be considered a
must-have resource for all emergency physicians and emergency
departments. My kudos go to Dr. Broder for his tremendous work.
This textbook represents a valuable addition to the emergency
medicine literature.. - Amal Mattu, MD, FAAEM, FACEP, Director,
Emergency Medicine Residency, Director, Faculty Development
Fellowship, Professor of Emergency Medicine, Department of
Emergency Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine,
Baltimore
Diagnostic Imaging for the Emergency Physician is the 'must-have'
resource for emergency physicians to make critical diagnostic
imaging decisions. It makes optimal use of imaging modalities for
emergency patients. Written by a master educator, the book teaches
clinicians how to use and interpret images in the diagnosis of
emergency conditions. Since the entire text was written by one
person, it is a more integrated text than books with chapters
authored by a multitude of practitioners. Broder provides clinical
information valuable to practitioners at multiple levels of
training, with or without prior training in diagnostic imaging.
Broder's writing style, like his teaching style, is simple,
practical, and understandable, smooth, and unambiguous; and the
image quality is consistent throughout the text. Broder provides
clear direction for how and when to order specific tests, and he
systematically describes how to read CTs. Diagnostic Imaging for
the Emergency Physician differs from other available texts also in
that it is targeted to the specific needs of board-certified
emergency physicians, emergency medicine residents, and students
interested in emergency medicine. This book may also serve
providers attending to patients in urgent and emergent settings." -
SirReadaLot.org
"This is not 'radiology-lite'; it is truly rooted in the specialty
and focuses on the selection and interpretation of diagnostic
imaging across the spectrum of our practice. It spans the divide
that sometimes seems to appear between specialties, and the reader
is introduced to problems, solutions and interpretations from both
radiological and emergency department (ED) perspectives.What I
really enjoyed in this book is the clear demonstration that ED
imaging extends beyond the plain x-ray. Much of the book is
concerned with CT, MR and ultrasound scans which are increasingly a
core of our practice and this text is the first I have seen that
clearly reflects this.The content allows this with superb
illustrations throughout, clearly labeled with clinical vignettes
that chimed with my own experiences.When using the online version,
you can magnify any image that appears to be a little small in the
paper version, a real demonstration of a successful pairing of
paper and e-publishing." -Simon Carley, Emergency Medicine
Journal (2012;29:5 427-428)
Diagnostic Imaging for the Emergency Physician is truly an
outstanding achievement by Dr. Broder. It is a book for emergency
physicians, by an emergency physician. It is thorough, clear,
evidence based, and clinically relevant. I would recommend it to
any emergency intern as the only emergency radiology text he or she
will ever need to buy. I don't think it will take long before it
becomes the quintessential emergency radiology teaching text." -
Jeffrey A. Holmes, MD, Department of Emergency Medicine, Maine
Medical Center, Portland, ME, Tufts University School of Medicine,
Boston, MA, writing in Annals of Emergency Medicine
Multiple reviews have declared this book the "must have" and
"single best" for imaging in Emergency Medicine!
"Dr. Broder, an emergency physician, not a radiologist, has made a
Herculean effort to summarize all of radiology in a single
textbook...This type of textbook has the advantage of a single
author and editor; no redundancy, and consistency of writing style,
both attribute that make for a readable work...The images of the
various modalities are excellent and the text explains the various
findings in each clinical diagnosis. The three-dimensional CT
reconstructions are very instructive to one who grew up in the
plain x-ray era. Interspersed throughout the text are clinical
vignettes for indication (head CT rules, spine rules, knee rules,
etc.), contrast vs. noncontrast studies, diagnostic accuracy, and
which study to select for which clinical scenario...In summary,
this is an amazing textbook and Dr. Broder should be commended for
putting something of this magnitude together solo. This book is
destined to become the "gold standard" for emergency imaging and
should be in every emergency department library. My first-year
residents all must give a lecture on imaging of a single body
region. This is the textbook that I recommend they use. It is
complete, evidence based, readable, and most importantly,
clinically relevant to the practice of emergency medicine. When it
is 3 AM and no radiologist is available, this is the reference book
you want." -Edward J. Otten, MD, FACMT, FAWM, The Journal of
Emergency Medicine, 2013
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