Jump to content

Schwartz's Principles of Surgery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 103.237.36.238 (talk) at 08:55, 7 June 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

GTAby Seymour Schwartz, MD. The first edition was published in 1969 by the McGraw-Hill. It is in eleventh edition in 2019. It is one of the main textbooks for medical students[according to whom?] and junior surgical residents.

Contents

Its ninth edition has 48 chapters.

  1. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Core Competences
  2. Systemic Response to Injury and Metabolic Support
  3. Fluid and Electrolyte Management of the Surgical Patient
  4. Hemostasis, Surgical Bleeding and Transfusion
  5. Shock
  6. Surgical Infection
  7. Trauma
  8. Burns
  9. Wound Healing
  10. Oncology
  11. Transplantation
  12. Patient Safety
  13. Physiologic Monitoring of the Surgical Patient
  14. Minimally Invasive Surgery, Robotics, and Natural Office Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery
  15. Molecular and Genomic Surgery
  16. The Skin and Subcutaneous Tissue
  17. The Breast
  18. Disorders of the Head and Neck
  19. Chest Wall, Lung, Mediastinum, and Pleura
  20. Congenital Heart Disease
  21. Acquired Heart Disease
  22. Thoracic Aneurysms and Aortic Dissection
  23. Arterial Disease
  24. Venous and Lymphatic Disease
  25. Esophagus and Diaphragmatic Hernia
  26. Stomach
  27. The Surgical Management of Obesity
  28. Small Intestine
  29. Colon, Rectum, and Anus
  30. The Appendix
  31. Liver
  32. Gallbladder and the Extrahepatic Biliary System
  33. Pancreas
  34. Spleen
  35. Abdominal Wall, Omentum, Mesentery, and Retroperitoneum
  36. Soft Tissue Sarcomas
  37. Inguinal Hernias
  38. Thyroid, Parathyroid, and Adrenal
  39. Pediatric Surgery
  40. Urology
  41. Gynecology
  42. Neurosurgery
  43. Orthopedic Surgery
  44. Surgery of the Hand and Wrist
  45. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
  46. Surgical Considerations in the Elderly
  47. Anesthesia of the Surgical Patient
  48. Ethics, Palliative Care, and Care at the End of Life