Richard Hopkins, Carol Peden, Sanjay Ghandi9781841101194, 1841101192
Table of contents :
Team@Lib……Page 0
Cover……Page 1
Contents……Page 6
Acknowledgements……Page 8
Contributors……Page 10
Introduction……Page 12
The Final examination……Page 14
Competency-based training and assessment……Page 15
Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain
and Ireland [1]……Page 18
Task Force on Preanaesthetic Evaluation of
the American Society of Anaesthesiologists [3]……Page 19
1 Imaging the chest……Page 22
How to read a chest X-ray……Page 23
The ‘normal’ chest X-ray in examination vivas……Page 28
Case illustrations: plain films and CT……Page 29
2 Imaging the abdomen……Page 98
Plain abdominal X-rays……Page 99
Case illustrations: plain films and CT……Page 101
3 Trauma radiology……Page 146
Chest trauma: case illustrations……Page 147
Blunt abdominal and pelvic trauma: case illustrations……Page 158
4 The cervical spine……Page 184
Introduction: clearing the cervical spine……Page 185
Non-traumatic conditions affecting the cervical spine……Page 200
Trauma of the cervical spine……Page 216
5 CT……Page 236
Principles of CT image formation……Page 237
Principles of interpreting CT……Page 240
Case illustrations……Page 241
6 Anaesthesia in the radiology
department with particular
reference to MRI and
interventional radiology……Page 278
Anaesthesia in the radiology department……Page 279
MRI: principles of image formation……Page 282
MRI: anaesthetic monitoring……Page 286
MRI: case illustrations……Page 291
Interventional procedures: case illustrations……Page 303
7 Ultrasound and
intensive care……Page 322
Ultrasound imaging: principles of image formation……Page 323
Applications of ultrasound for patients on
intensive care units……Page 325
Ultrasound imaging: case illustrations……Page 333
Index……Page 342
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