Waxman: Clinical Neuroanatomy 26th Edition






The brain, more complex than any computer that has ever been invented, is what makes us human. The science of the brain—neuroscience—has emerged as one of the most exciting fields of research and now occupies a central role in medicine, providing a firm scientific basis for clinical practice. At the heart of neuroscience lies the structure of the nervous system: neuroanatomy. An understanding of the nervous system and its anatomy is essential not just to researchers and not just to neurologists and psychiatrists but to clinicians in all subspecialties, because they all will encounter patients with disorders involving the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves.

Stroke, for example, is the third most frequent cause of death in industrialized societies; mood disorders such as depression affect more than one person in 10; and dysfunction of the nervous system can be seen in 25% of patients in most general hospitals at some time during their hospital stay. The neuroanatomy basis for many of these disorders is already known, and for other disorders it will soon be discovered. 

This book provides a concise but comprehensive and easy-to-remember synopsis of neuroanatomy and of its functional and clinical implications. In this new, revised 26th edition, most chapters have been revised and carefully focused so that they emphasize the most important concepts, facts, and structures. As a teacher, researcher, and clinician, I have tried to sculpt this book so that it will provide a resource and learning tool for busy medical students, residents, and students in health-related fields such as physical therapy; for graduate students who need an introduction to neuroanatomy; and for clinicians in practice, for whom minutes are precious. This book is not meant to supplant the longer, more encompassing, and comprehensive handbooks of neuroscience and neuroanatomy. On the contrary, it provides a more manageable and concise overview that presents the essential aspects of neuroanatomy and its functional and clinical correlations. 

This book is unique in including a section entitled "Introduction to Clinical Thinking," which appears early in the text to introduce the reader to the logical processes involved in using neuroanatomy as a basis for thinking about the disordered nervous system. Recognizing that some students remember patients better than isolated facts, I have included discussions of clinical correlates and clinical illustrations that synthesize the most important characteristics of patients selected from an extensive clinical experience to help the reader interpret and remember neuroanatomic concepts in terms offunction and clinical implications. 

Because much of neuroanatomy has a spatial and visual aspect, this book includes numerous figures. The illustrations provide clear, explicit, and memorable representations of important pathways, structures, and mechanisms. Many tables are included, and they have been designed to be clear and easy to remember. These figures and tables incorporate feedback and suggestions from numerous trainees as well as teachers of neuroanatomy. 

The advent of modern neuroimaging has revolutionized the clinical neurosciences, and this hook takes full advantage of this technological advance by including numerous computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of the normal brain and spinal cord, together with functional magnetic resonance images (nVIRI) which provide a noninvasive window on brain function. Also included are neuroimaging studies that illustrate common pathological entities that affect the nervous system, including stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, and tumors of the brain and spinal cord. 

As with past editions, I owe a debt of gratitude to many colleagues and friends, especially the faculty of the Department of Neurology at Yale Medical School. Drs Joachim Baehring and Joseph Schindler were most generous in sharing their thoughts and cases, some of which appear in this book. They, and other colleagues at Yale, have helped to create an environment where learning is fun, a motif that I have woven into this book. I hope that readers of this book will join me in finding that neuroanatomy, which provides much of the foundation for both basic neuroscience and clinical medicine, can be enjoyable, memorable, and easily learned.
Stephen G. Waxman, MD, PhD 



New Key Features in This Edition!
  • 300+ full-color illustrations.
  • Larger 8½ × 11 trim size complements the new full-color art.
  • Discussion of the latest advances in molecular and cellular biology in the context of neuroanatomy.
  • Coverage of the basic structure and function of the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves as well as clinical presentations of disease processes involving specific structures.
  • Clinical Correlations and case studies to help you interpret and remember essential neuroanatomic concepts in terms of function and clinical application.
  • Numerous computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of the normal brain and spinal cord; functional magnetic resonance images that provide a noninvasive window on brain function; and neuroimaging studies that illustrate common pathological entities that affect the nervous system, including stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, and tumors of the brain and spinal cord.
  • Introduction to Clinical Thinking section explains how to use neuroanatomy as a basis for analyzing the disordered nervous sytem.
  • Numerous tables that make information clear and easy to remember.
  • A complete practice exam to test your knowledge.

Contents
I. BASIC PRINICPLES
1. Fundamentals of the Nervous System
2. Development and Cellular Constituents of the Nervous System
3. Signaling in the Nervous System
4. Why Every Clinician Needs to Understand the Functional Anatomy of the Brain and Spinal Cord: The Relationship Between Neuroanatomy and Neurology

II. SPINAL CORD AND SPINE
5. The Spinal Cord
6. The Vertebral Column and other Structures Surrounding the Spinal Cord

IV. ANATOMY OF THE BRAIN
7. The Brain Stem and Cerebellum
8. Cranial Nerves and Pathways
9. Diencephalon
10. Cerebral Hemispheres/Telencephalon
11. Ventricles and Coverings of the Brain
12. Vascular Supply of the Brain

V. FUNCTIONAL SYSTEMS
13. Control of Movement
14. Somatosensory Systems
15. The Visual System
16. The Auditory System
17. The Vestibular System
18. The Reticular Formation
19. The Limbic System
20. The Autonomic Nervous System
21. Higher Cortical Functions

VI. DIAGNOSTIC AIDS
22. Imaging of the Brain
23. Electrodiagnostic Tests
24. Cerebrospinal Fluid Examination

VI. DISCUSSION OF CASES
25. Discussion of Cases

APPENDICES
Appendix A: The Neurological Examination
Appendix B: Testing Muscle Function
Appendix C: Spinal Nerves and Plexuses
Appendix D: Questions and Answers

Product Details
  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Medical; 26 edition (2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0071603999
  • ISBN-13: 978-0071603997
  • Product Dimensions: 10.7 x 8.5 x 0.7 inches
List Price: $57.95 
 

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