Critical-Care Books
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Critical-Care Books sorted by
Average customer review: high to low
.

Cardiopulmonary Physiology in Critical Care (Fundamental and Clinical Cardiology)
Published in Hardcover by Informa HealthCare (1992-05-14)
List price: $199.95
New price: $46.78
Used price: $42.10
Used price: $42.10
Average review score: 

Basic science meets clinical medicine
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-03
Review Date: 2001-05-03
This is an excellent text if one is interested in the interactions between basic and clinical sciences. Primary care providers
would not likely find this of much interest. Basic scientists and subspecialists would find this an excellent bridge between
the two fields(a subject which is otherwise difficult to find and simplily described). This is much easier than the Handbook
of Physiology to read, yet as informative. This is intended to be for fellows & practicing physicians in the ICU.

Clinical Application of Mechanical Ventilation
Published in Paperback by Delmar Cengage Learning (2005-09-06)
List price: $117.95
New price: $89.99
Used price: $89.12
Used price: $89.12
Average review score: 

Clinical Application of Mechanical Ventilation
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-30
Review Date: 2000-03-30
As a respiratory student, I highly recommend this book for student's and staff alike. The book supplies useful information,
and challenging questions in all areas that applies toward patient assessment and care.

Clinical Cardiac CT (Book & DVD-ROM): Anatomy and Function
Published in Hardcover by Thieme New York (2008-01-17)
List price: $139.95
New price: $111.96
Used price: $134.34
Used price: $134.34
Average review score: 

Good book for Cardiac CT
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-20
Review Date: 2008-05-20
Good book for Cardiac CT for beginners and also as a reference textbook
for any department doing cardiac CT. Easily readable and good CT images throughout. Initial chapter on how to do cardiac CT gives a good review of indications/techniques/drugs and protocols to be used. Chapter on CT coronary anatomy and anomalies is good. Rest of the chapters on coronary arterial disease, stents etc. are thorough and readable. CD provided gives decent images but the CD can't be used as an interactive cardiac CT tutor for case studies.
Makes one understand the basics and the pathology concerned and makes one more confident to start off with Cardiac CT. Definitely worth the price.
for any department doing cardiac CT. Easily readable and good CT images throughout. Initial chapter on how to do cardiac CT gives a good review of indications/techniques/drugs and protocols to be used. Chapter on CT coronary anatomy and anomalies is good. Rest of the chapters on coronary arterial disease, stents etc. are thorough and readable. CD provided gives decent images but the CD can't be used as an interactive cardiac CT tutor for case studies.
Makes one understand the basics and the pathology concerned and makes one more confident to start off with Cardiac CT. Definitely worth the price.

Clinical Recognition of Congenital Heart Disease
Published in Hardcover by Saunders (2003-04-01)
List price: $182.00
New price: $159.99
Used price: $190.02
Used price: $190.02
Average review score: 

Complete information for specialists
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-15
Review Date: 2001-02-15
I used this book during the preparation of my thesis. For this purpose, it was sometimes too detailed and complex. I think
this book will be helpfull for congenital heart specialists, since all information is included for every heart defect, very
well-organized. Every chapter on a certain malformation includes the history, physical appearance, auscultation, additional
investigations and a clear summary. A lot of illustrations of ECG's or x-rays and pictures clarify the text. The book is (as
the title says) specifically focussed on the clinical recognition of a malformation. For other purposes, such as studying
longer-term outcome, the book does not provide the information.
Clinical Simulations Critical Care: Complex Problems (CD-ROM for Windows, Institutional Version)
Published in CD-ROM by Jones & Bartlett Publishers (2001-02-15)
List price: $101.95
New price: $101.95
Average review score: 

Dr. Sanchez
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-27
Review Date: 2000-06-27
I teach Molecular Biology for Biologyst students. This book has been a good tool to teach, because has all the main points
that are need to know the bases of Microbial genetics. Other books are excellents but this book has the minimun to know and
understand other books.

Color Atlas of Immunology (Thieme Flexibook)
Published in Paperback by Georg Thieme Verlag (2002-12)
List price: $19.97
New price: $18.32
Used price: $15.99
Used price: $15.99
Average review score: 

A Pleasant Invitation to Immunology
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-31
Review Date: 2008-10-31
This book is enjoyable to go through. The figures seem to be well-done in a number of ways. They are simple enough in color
and representation (to facilitate understanding and lower publication costs), but complex enough that important details as
well as a certain professional look are preserved. The book is divided into three main sections: fundamentals, lab applications,
and clinical information. There are helpful tables and lists. The only downside to this book that I see is the paucity of
references. There are references to other books and encyclopedias in the back, but I do not see references to landmark journal
articles that demonstrated the "facts" and claims of the text.
In short, this book is good for an introductory class in immunology. It is definitely better than the other immunology book I reviewed a short while ago, if one did not account for differences in price. If you are looking for an immunology reference it may be better to purchase an encyclopedia (some are listed at the back of the book). For graduate students of immunology this book may be too light on the references.
In short, this book is good for an introductory class in immunology. It is definitely better than the other immunology book I reviewed a short while ago, if one did not account for differences in price. If you are looking for an immunology reference it may be better to purchase an encyclopedia (some are listed at the back of the book). For graduate students of immunology this book may be too light on the references.

Comprehensive Textbook of Intraoperative Transesophageal Echocardiography
Published in Hardcover by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (2004-12-01)
List price: $229.00
New price: $61.49
Used price: $61.73
Used price: $61.73
Average review score: 

One text cannot do it all, but this one tries.
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
Review Date: 2006-02-25
The book seems to have two goals: Clinical use of TEE in the cardiac operating room; and passing the "Echo Exam."
When it comes to echocardiography I am a tyro. Thus the review of this work is not from the perspective of an expert in the field, but from that of someone who is trying to use this book as intended: as a textbook in transesophageal echocardiography. It is an excellent text for this.
Were it not for a curious omission, and for what I think an excessive number of errors (especially in one chapter) for a book of this importance and price, I would give it five stars.
Echocardiography is primarily a visual discipline, and this book is profusely, and for the most part well, illustrated. The publisher's web site claims "1,000 full-color echocardiograms" and I expect this is true.
The illustrations, for the most part, can only be called superb. But, reflecting of what I see as lack of editorial oversight, several chapters have illustrations which simply best illustrate that one cannot take Power-Point® slides and turn them into even barely acceptable book plates. Fortunately the chapters which took this approach are the most dispensable.
Sticking with lack of editorial cohesiveness for a moment, I personally found it disruptive that the text for multi-image figures in some chapters used the "A) ... Text", whilst that in others used "Text ... A)" formatting. Why yes, I am detail oriented, and, yes there are larger issues in the world: but there is no more reason for doing this than there would have been to have switched typefaces or fonts with each chapter.
In addition to the illustrations, each chapter has a well written, in-depth text, an extensive bibliography, and concludes with Echo Exam review questions. Truly the only subjects which I thought could have been better covered were the determination of IVRT and a more clear presentation of parachute mitral valve.
There are over a hundred contributing authors. This gives expert coverage in each area, but, inevitably, leads to duplication. Perhaps a bit too much duplication, especially of images. Truly, does the Cleveland Clinic have only one TEE frame of an Alfieri repair, or of the RUPV? The more you see, the more you see. Repeatedly viewing the same image simply does not help to broaden ones visual memory and range. Again, I think that more aggressive editing would have caught this, and would have presented the learner with an even wider range of images.
Leaving aside the very few, very short, fluff chapters, save for a single exception the chapters are of an optimal size to be studied in an evening. This is important, as it gives the student a sense of progress in a very complex subject which at times seems overwhelming. Concise, clear, small chapters also makes going back to review a particular point quite easy easier.
The exception is chapter 28 "Assessment in Mitral Valve Surgery" which, at 85 pages (excluding bibliography and questions), is simply too long. It could have, should have, been broken down into several separate chapters. It is notable that similar information on the lesser complexities of the aortic valve is presented in two comfortably sized chapters.
Also notable is the density of errors which appear in this oversized chapter. I do not know if the chapter editor was simply overwhelmed with the task, or if the chapter was turned in late. In any event, the errors are all of a nature that should have been caught and which do detract from the discussion of one of the most difficult and important areas in TEE.
Two examples will suffice. In table 28.2 the ME LAX MV views are mistakenly shown for the ME 2C MV (later correctly shown in Fig 28.31). This is simply an editorial mistake, as no knowledge of echocardiography is needed to see that the drawings are repeated. A more subtle error is found in Fig 28.70 where the derivation of a simplified ROA estimation drops the square of the radius from the equation. There are many others, many more than in the remaining chapters.
Yes, I do realize there will be mistakes in any text. I became painfully aware of this in the early 1980s when trying to learn i86 assembly language. Assembly language is the lowest level human readable programming language for a particular processor. All of the early texts had errors: fortunately no two had the same, so one could piece things together. This seems to be true of current echo texts as well.
I find learning echocardiography about as difficult as learning assembler, and, at my level, I do not recognize all of the errors in the texts. I expect that many other learners may be as confused as I by TEE's murky grey images overlaid with swirling bright colors. In such a complex field, I believe textbook editors should take special pains to insure accuracy.
All that aside, the MV assessment chapter (28) still has a wealth of well presented information. Indeed the single most valuable insight I gained from the book was on page 459 of this chapter. My epiphany was the realization that the mitral valve is oriented near vertically. Somehow I had missed this fact in all the reading, courses, dissections, videos, and actual echoes I have done. The "3D Imaging Plane View" illustrations on this page made the orientation obvious. For me this alone was truly worth the price of the book. Sadly, turning the page immediately brings one to the most egregious error in the work.
On the whole the book is tightly focused on developing the knowledge and skills to effectively use transesophageal echo in the cardiac operating room. I would have preferred a chapter on transthoracic echo to some of the surgical minutia and to the odd inclusion of a chapter on basic statistics. Though the latter is an exceptionally well written chapter, I was perplexed at its appearance in a book on TEE in the OR.
The twenty-nine page appendix also confounds me. Whilst a useful compendium of echocardiographic tables, the pages are perforated. Perhaps there are those who would rip out the pages in a two-hundred dollar book, but I am not among them. So, for me, it simply means I had to run tape along them to keep them from tearing loose on their own.
As to the book's suitability for preparation for the PTEeXAM I cannot actually say, as I am still trying to figure out if I am eligible to sit for the exam, and, if so, which certification I might be eligible for. No more whining about this confusion here, there is enough of that at any echo conference. However, given that the many of the authors of the exam are also authors of this book I expect that time spent with this book would be repaid.
What is surprisingly missing from this text is an accompanying video disk. Given the importance of moving pictures to understanding echo and the low cost and ease with which a disk can be included in a book, this is a curious omission indeed. Sidebotham's very excellent "Practical Perioperative Transoesophageal Echocardiography" does include such and I would strongly recommend purchasing that text in addition too, or, if cost is an issue, instead of, this more comprehensive and expensive text. The addition of videos, in my opinion, more than makes up for the lesser coverage in Sidebotham.
It is possible that a disk was to have been included, as, when I came to this Amazon page to write the review under "Editorial Reviews" I saw it stated "An enclosed CD-ROM includes full-color TEE videos and multiple-choice questions and answers for self-assesment [sic] and exam preparation."
I purchased my volume directly from a Lippincott sales table at the ASA, and it is possible that I simply got one without a disk. However, the Lippincott web site makes no mention of such a disk in their description of the book. My suspicion is that this is something that was dropped at the last minute. I did write Lippincott and have asked, but have not yet had a reply.
You cannot go wrong by purchasing this book (with or without the mystery disk) as it gives an extensive, clear, in-depth introduction to transesophageal echo in the operating room.
Sadly though, when studying echo, one is left with the sense of mastering the horse and buggy (2D echo) whilst knowing the motorcar (3D) is just around the corner.
Bonne Chance.
When it comes to echocardiography I am a tyro. Thus the review of this work is not from the perspective of an expert in the field, but from that of someone who is trying to use this book as intended: as a textbook in transesophageal echocardiography. It is an excellent text for this.
Were it not for a curious omission, and for what I think an excessive number of errors (especially in one chapter) for a book of this importance and price, I would give it five stars.
Echocardiography is primarily a visual discipline, and this book is profusely, and for the most part well, illustrated. The publisher's web site claims "1,000 full-color echocardiograms" and I expect this is true.
The illustrations, for the most part, can only be called superb. But, reflecting of what I see as lack of editorial oversight, several chapters have illustrations which simply best illustrate that one cannot take Power-Point® slides and turn them into even barely acceptable book plates. Fortunately the chapters which took this approach are the most dispensable.
Sticking with lack of editorial cohesiveness for a moment, I personally found it disruptive that the text for multi-image figures in some chapters used the "A) ... Text", whilst that in others used "Text ... A)" formatting. Why yes, I am detail oriented, and, yes there are larger issues in the world: but there is no more reason for doing this than there would have been to have switched typefaces or fonts with each chapter.
In addition to the illustrations, each chapter has a well written, in-depth text, an extensive bibliography, and concludes with Echo Exam review questions. Truly the only subjects which I thought could have been better covered were the determination of IVRT and a more clear presentation of parachute mitral valve.
There are over a hundred contributing authors. This gives expert coverage in each area, but, inevitably, leads to duplication. Perhaps a bit too much duplication, especially of images. Truly, does the Cleveland Clinic have only one TEE frame of an Alfieri repair, or of the RUPV? The more you see, the more you see. Repeatedly viewing the same image simply does not help to broaden ones visual memory and range. Again, I think that more aggressive editing would have caught this, and would have presented the learner with an even wider range of images.
Leaving aside the very few, very short, fluff chapters, save for a single exception the chapters are of an optimal size to be studied in an evening. This is important, as it gives the student a sense of progress in a very complex subject which at times seems overwhelming. Concise, clear, small chapters also makes going back to review a particular point quite easy easier.
The exception is chapter 28 "Assessment in Mitral Valve Surgery" which, at 85 pages (excluding bibliography and questions), is simply too long. It could have, should have, been broken down into several separate chapters. It is notable that similar information on the lesser complexities of the aortic valve is presented in two comfortably sized chapters.
Also notable is the density of errors which appear in this oversized chapter. I do not know if the chapter editor was simply overwhelmed with the task, or if the chapter was turned in late. In any event, the errors are all of a nature that should have been caught and which do detract from the discussion of one of the most difficult and important areas in TEE.
Two examples will suffice. In table 28.2 the ME LAX MV views are mistakenly shown for the ME 2C MV (later correctly shown in Fig 28.31). This is simply an editorial mistake, as no knowledge of echocardiography is needed to see that the drawings are repeated. A more subtle error is found in Fig 28.70 where the derivation of a simplified ROA estimation drops the square of the radius from the equation. There are many others, many more than in the remaining chapters.
Yes, I do realize there will be mistakes in any text. I became painfully aware of this in the early 1980s when trying to learn i86 assembly language. Assembly language is the lowest level human readable programming language for a particular processor. All of the early texts had errors: fortunately no two had the same, so one could piece things together. This seems to be true of current echo texts as well.
I find learning echocardiography about as difficult as learning assembler, and, at my level, I do not recognize all of the errors in the texts. I expect that many other learners may be as confused as I by TEE's murky grey images overlaid with swirling bright colors. In such a complex field, I believe textbook editors should take special pains to insure accuracy.
All that aside, the MV assessment chapter (28) still has a wealth of well presented information. Indeed the single most valuable insight I gained from the book was on page 459 of this chapter. My epiphany was the realization that the mitral valve is oriented near vertically. Somehow I had missed this fact in all the reading, courses, dissections, videos, and actual echoes I have done. The "3D Imaging Plane View" illustrations on this page made the orientation obvious. For me this alone was truly worth the price of the book. Sadly, turning the page immediately brings one to the most egregious error in the work.
On the whole the book is tightly focused on developing the knowledge and skills to effectively use transesophageal echo in the cardiac operating room. I would have preferred a chapter on transthoracic echo to some of the surgical minutia and to the odd inclusion of a chapter on basic statistics. Though the latter is an exceptionally well written chapter, I was perplexed at its appearance in a book on TEE in the OR.
The twenty-nine page appendix also confounds me. Whilst a useful compendium of echocardiographic tables, the pages are perforated. Perhaps there are those who would rip out the pages in a two-hundred dollar book, but I am not among them. So, for me, it simply means I had to run tape along them to keep them from tearing loose on their own.
As to the book's suitability for preparation for the PTEeXAM I cannot actually say, as I am still trying to figure out if I am eligible to sit for the exam, and, if so, which certification I might be eligible for. No more whining about this confusion here, there is enough of that at any echo conference. However, given that the many of the authors of the exam are also authors of this book I expect that time spent with this book would be repaid.
What is surprisingly missing from this text is an accompanying video disk. Given the importance of moving pictures to understanding echo and the low cost and ease with which a disk can be included in a book, this is a curious omission indeed. Sidebotham's very excellent "Practical Perioperative Transoesophageal Echocardiography" does include such and I would strongly recommend purchasing that text in addition too, or, if cost is an issue, instead of, this more comprehensive and expensive text. The addition of videos, in my opinion, more than makes up for the lesser coverage in Sidebotham.
It is possible that a disk was to have been included, as, when I came to this Amazon page to write the review under "Editorial Reviews" I saw it stated "An enclosed CD-ROM includes full-color TEE videos and multiple-choice questions and answers for self-assesment [sic] and exam preparation."
I purchased my volume directly from a Lippincott sales table at the ASA, and it is possible that I simply got one without a disk. However, the Lippincott web site makes no mention of such a disk in their description of the book. My suspicion is that this is something that was dropped at the last minute. I did write Lippincott and have asked, but have not yet had a reply.
You cannot go wrong by purchasing this book (with or without the mystery disk) as it gives an extensive, clear, in-depth introduction to transesophageal echo in the operating room.
Sadly though, when studying echo, one is left with the sense of mastering the horse and buggy (2D echo) whilst knowing the motorcar (3D) is just around the corner.
Bonne Chance.

Core Topics in Cardiac Anaesthesia
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (2004-08-09)
List price: $98.00
New price: $71.98
Used price: $71.98
Used price: $71.98
Average review score: 

Core Topics in Cardiac Anaesthesia (Anesthesia)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-26
Review Date: 2005-09-26
The book is good, but more synthetic in some chapters; however this book is not a textbook, therefore this book is a satisfactory
book and interesting.

Critical Care of the Burned Patient
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (2007-12-03)
List price: $43.00
New price: $35.54
Used price: $42.84
Used price: $42.84
Average review score: 

a critical care nurses thoughts on this handbook
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-15
Review Date: 2000-02-15
very concise information that you can use right no
Critical Care: A Volume in the Requisites in Anesthesiology Series
Published in Hardcover by Mosby (2005-06-01)
List price: $89.00
New price: $79.84
Used price: $69.99
Used price: $69.99
Average review score: 

A quick read for 4th yr medstudents and 1st yr residents
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-13
Review Date: 2006-03-13
A nice broad based big picture review of all relevant topics in critical care. presentation is clean and refreshing. A good
adjunct to The ICU book. You can crank out a chapter in 20 min and have it down solid.
HealthIssueBooks.com-->Critical-Care-->41
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