Each chapter in this concise 2nd Edition thoroughly updates the original text and describes the major conditions encountered in general surgery. Specifically designed for the student in surgery or other short introductory surgery courses, this edition offers the "essentials" of surgical disorders, with emphasis on both the basic and the clinical features of the diseases. ALL medical students can use its expert information, which goes beyond general surgery to include material on cardiothoracic surgery, orthopaedics, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, otolaryngology, and urology.New, shorter length of book pares information to the essentials to keep content straightforward and manageableRecognized authorities in the field (including 54 new contributors) provide master guidance in one source 13 new chapters, such as Melanoma and Portal Hypertension, broaden the text's scope to provide students with comprehensive, current informationLogical organization follows the anatomic, physiologic, pathologic, biologic, chemical, immunologic, and pharmacologic features of surgical disorders to help underscore the important relationship between the basic sciences in medicine and their clinical counterparts Carefully selected figures and illustrations skillfully demonstrate text material to simplify concepts and make them accessibleCompanion text Andreoli et al.: CECIL ESSENTIALS OF MEDICINE and Behrman and Kliegman: NELSON ESSENTIALS OF PEDIATRICS complete a triad developed for medical students to fulfill curricular course requirements
Sabiston contains both basic science and clinical information, but you'll still need both a basic science book (for more detail) as well as another clinical book (Cameron's is great) to get a more detailed and balanced exposure to the broad field of general surgery. As big, "standard" texts go, it's a good one. I think it has better detail in most sections than Schwartz. Some people prefer Greenfield's - I don't have that one, so can't comment. I have used Sabiston as my major reference through-out surgery residency, and can recommend it to you.
Never read Schwartz, but....
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
I bought the Sabiston 15th Edition for my surgery rotation and actually read a few pertinent chapters. There's usually a few pages with historical background info (a favorite of the chief) and then it jumps into etiology, diagnosis, techniques and treatments. I used a chapter on Ischemic Bowel Disease to present at Grand Rounds (gulp) to the entire Dept of Surgery at the Mt Vernon Hospital, NY and actually came off sounding competent. I supplemented my Neurological Surgery Observership at UCSF with the sections on neurosurgery and it served as a good PRIMER to the specialty. This book covers all aspects of the Surgical fields, including ENT, Ortho, Plastics, Thoracic, etc. The only real competition for this text is Schwartz. Take a look at both before deciding on which is best for you.
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