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Sir Zachary Cope

    Sir Vincent Zachary Cope fu un medico e chirurgo inglese, rinomato principalmente per essere l'autore di "La diagnosi precoce dell'addome acuto di Cope". Pubblicata per la prima volta nel 1921, quest'opera fondamentale è stata continuamente aggiornata nel corso della sua carriera professionale. Anche molto tempo dopo la sua scomparsa nel 1974, nuove edizioni continuarono ad essere pubblicate da editori successivi, sottolineando la sua duratura importanza nel campo medico.

    Die Frühdiagnose des Akuten Abdomen
    Cope's Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen
    • 2005

      Cope's Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen

      Twenty-First Edition

      • 298pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      This famous text is much beloved by medical students and physicians-in-training throughout the English-speaking world, as its many editions indicate. Despite its relatively narrow focus, it is chock full of the pearls of clinical wisdom that students and practitioners treasure, and many of these lessons apply to medicine in general. The book was well characterized by a reviewer of an earlier edition for The New England Journal of Medicine: "If only one book about surgery could be made available to physicians from all specialties, it should probably be Silen's recent revision of Cope's Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen. Since the book first appeared more than 30 years ago, it has remained the classic treatise on the initial approach to abdominal pain." Because acute, severe abdominal pain is still a common problem whose misdiagnosis can result in quick death, each generation of beginning physicians is faced with the urgency of learning to make a diagnosis in this high anxiety situation and they appreciate the wise, humane, precisely detailed guidance offered by Cope and Silen. For the 21st Edition, Dr. Silen has again updated the text in a respectful but significant way. He has strengthened its emphasis on pitfalls in the interpretation of CT and ultrasound scans, on misadventures caused by over-reliance on blood tests and radiographs, and on careful history-taking to avoid the costs of inappropriate lab tests. He has also reviewed the data from a randomized clinical trial indicating that patients should receive adequate analgesia while awaiting a definitive diagnosis, a dictum that is contrary to traditional teaching.

      Cope's Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen