According to the late American preacher Samuel McChord Crothers, “The trouble with facts is that there are so many of them.” Nowhere is this saying more apposite than in medicine.
Core Clinical Medicine is an intentionally short book aimed at the clinical student in his or her first clinical year. It is designed to be an accessible text that is easy to read from cover to cover, which gives the incoming student a non-specialized overview of the basics of general clinical medicine. The book covers the main pathological processes that can be at work, then considers the clinical disease that these processes bring to the different systems of the body.
Sample Chapter(s)
Introduction (60 KB)
Chapter 1: The Pathological Processes (88 KB)
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Contents:
- The Pathological Processes:
- Atherosclerotic
- Cancer
- Infection
- Autoimmune and Inflammatory
- Metabolic and Endocrine
- Congenital
- Traumatic
- Drug-Induced
- The System Failures:
- Heart Failure
- Lung or Respiratory Failure
- Intestinal or Gut Failure
- Liver Failure
- Renal Failure
- Endocrine Dysfunctions
- Neurology
- Rheumatological Failure
- Haematological Failure
- Immunodeficiency
- Major Sepsis
- Major Haemorrhage
- Cancer
- Some Words About Blood Gases
- Some Typical Patient Pictures:
- The Arteriopath
- The Alcoholic
- The Medical Problems of the Psychotic
- The Intravenous Drug User (IVDU)
- The Very Sick Patient
- The Elderly Patient
- The Very Obese
- Four Lists of Ten:
- The Ten Most Important Emergencies
- The Ten Most Common Presenting Complaints
- The Ten Most Useful Tests
- The Ten Most Useful Drugs
Readership: Medical students and undergraduates.
Gordon Stewart qualified in Medicine at Edinburgh and worked in Hammersmith and Cambridge, before becoming a Lecturer at St. Mary's Hospital Paddington. He is currently an Honorary Consultant Physician at University College Hospital and an acclaimed Professor of General Medicine at University College London (UCL). Professor Stewart has been awarded many UCL prizes for the quality of his teaching. He organized the “Medicine” lecture course at UCL and this book derives from that course.