Atlas of Male Genital Dermatology


Book Description

This atlas provides a practical guide applicable to the diagnosis and management of skin diseases affecting the male genital area. Chapters feature concise descriptions and advice on potential management strategies and cover sexually transmissible infections, candidal balano-posthitis, rare male genital malignancies, and pigmentary disorders. Every description is accompanied by a broad range of images of a particular disease or disorder, enabling the reader to develop a deeper understanding of both diagnostic and management aspects of skin diseases affecting male genitalia. Atlas of Male Genital Dermatology enables readers to quickly and successfully identify a variety of dermatological disorders that can affect the male genitalia. It provides instruction on how to effectively manage these conditions and is a valuable resource for any physician who encounters these conditions in daily practice.




Practical Dermatology


Book Description




Current Catalog


Book Description

First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.




Atlas of Dermatology, Dermatopathology and Venereology


Book Description

Bringing together thousands of the best dermatologic clinical and pathological photographs and figures from researchers and scientists around the world, this volume focuses on the most prevalent dermatologic disorders as they relate to cutaneous infectious and neoplastic conditions and procedural dermatology. It includes atypical presentations of various disorders, giving insight into differential diagnoses, helping to familiarize the reader with some of the rarest dermatologic disorders. Atlas of Dermatology, Dermatopathology and Venereology Volume 3 is written for dermatologists, dermatopathologists, and residents and summarizes data regarding any dermatologic disorder and syndrome. Each entry includes an introduction, clinical and pathological manifestations, diagnosis, differential diagnosis, and treatment and prognosis. div>/div/div/div




Practical Dermatology


Book Description

A handbook useful to the daily routine of busy clinical practice. Intended to meet the needs of an expanding number of primary care clinicians and to provide a quick reference for nondermatologic specialists who occasionally see and treat patients with skin disease. It is also meant to provide students at all levels of training with a comprehensive dermatological learning tool. This edition places more emphasis on patient education.




Technology in Practical Dermatology


Book Description

This book provides a complete overview on the latest available technologies in dermatology, while discussing future trends of this ever-growing field. This handy guide provides clinicians and researchers with a clear understanding of the advantages and challenges of laser and imaging technologies in skin medicine today. It also includes a section on imaging techniques for the evaluation of skin tumors, with chapters devoted to dermoscopy, in vivo and ex vivo reflectance confocal microscopy, high frequency ultrasound, optical coherence tomography, and a closing part on latest approaches to wound management. Completed by over 200 clinical images, Current Technology in Practical Dermatology: Non-Invasive Imaging, Lasers and Ulcer Management is both a valuable tool for the inpatient dermatologist and for physicians, residents, and medical students in the field.




A Practical Guide to Vulval Disease


Book Description

This book is a practical guide to the diagnosis and management of vulval disorders. It offers guidance for all those who are treating patients with vulval disease at trainee and specialist level, helping to improve management for the patient and prevent delays in diagnosis, including referrals to specialists. It contains key information about diagnosis, investigation and basic management, with a section on signs and symptoms guides the reader to the correct chapter for the treatment of that disease. The experienced authors include updated classification and terminology of vulval disease with an explanation of how this should be useful in clinical practice and guidance as to when the patient should be referred on to a specialist. As vulval diseases are different to those of the rest of the skin patients with vulval disease present a large unmet need, often with delays in diagnosis due to a lack of training from physicians. This practical guide provides the specialist knowledge required for diagnosis and treatment of these conditions.




Practical Problems in Dermatology


Book Description

This book is ideal for all dealing with those dermatological conditions most commonly encountered in primary medical care. There is essential information on diagnosis and management and new sections on conditions associated with foreign travel and with bites and infestations.




Pharmacology of Itch


Book Description

Basic research on the pharmacology of itch has exploded in the wake of two very influential papers that were published in Nature (2007) and Science (2009). Long overlooked as a milder form of pain, itching has rapidly gained a new appreciation in both research and clinical communities because of its complexity and its negative effects on the quality of life of the distressed patients. Like pain, not all itches are the same. Unlike pain, there are no standard drugs equivalent to aspirin and morphine. Epidemiological studies emphasize the high incidence and economic costs of itch (pruritus). It is the most prevalent symptom of a wide variety of allergic and inflammatory skin conditions (e.g., psoriasis, atopic dermatitis), is associated with several systemic diseases (e.g., chronic kidney and liver disease), and occurs in patients undergoing hemodialysis, spinal administration of opioids, and in those suffering from AIDS. The reader will learn about the multiple pathways for itch and their interactions with pain. The relationship between these closely related, yet distinct sensory phenomena, will be emphasized. Both itch and pain use several common molecules to send signals to the brain. Thus, drugs that have been, and are being, developed as analgesics may also attenuate intractable itch. This has been an exciting and very necessary turn of events since traditional H-1 receptor antagonists are ineffective in blocking the pruritus associated with kidney failure and cholestasis. The clinical chapters will provide insights into contemporary treatment regimens for pruritus in different human scenarios.