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Books > Medicine > Pre-clinical medicine: basic sciences > Human reproduction, growth & development > Reproductive medicine > Embryology
The Fundamentals of Human Embryology covers embryonic development, with a unique focus on adult anatomy.
Its goal is to impart to students a comprehensive overview of how the human embryo forms, not only as a basis for the student of human anatomy, but also as a link to abnormalities they may encounter in their clinical careers. Extensively illustrated with labeled line drawings, now enlarged for better visibility, this concise manual will meet the needs of both undergraduate and postgraduate students in the Human Sciences.
In this Second Edition of the manual at the request of students and teachers, the authors have made the following changes:
- Increased the size of the diagrams
- Revised the text to comply with the Federative International Committee on Anatomical Terminology changes to the Terminologia Embryologica
- Altered the sequencing of some topics to allow the development to flow more logically
- Included an appendix of coloured photographs of congenital abnormalities to help students form a more realistic idea of developmental abnormalities.
In recent decades there has been an explosion in work in the social
and physical sciences describing the similarities between human and
nonhuman as well as human and non-animal thinking. This work has
explicitly decentered the brain as the sole, self-contained space
of thought, and it has found thinking to be an activity that
operates not only across bodies but also across bodily or cellular
membranes, as well as multifaceted organic and inorganic
environments. For example, researchers have looked at the
replication and spread of slime molds (playfully asking what would
happen if they colonized the earth) to suggest that they exhibit
'smart behavior' in the way they move as a potential way of
considering the spread of disease across the globe. Other scholars
have applied this model of non-human thought to the reach of data
mining and global surveillance. In The Biopolitics of Alphabets and
Embryos, Ruth Miller argues that these types of phenomena are also
useful models for thinking about the growth, reproduction, and
spread of political thought and democratic processes. Giving slime,
data and unbounded entities their political dues, Miller stresses
their thinking power and political significance and thus challenges
the anthropocentrism of mainstream democratic theories. Miller
emphasizes the non-human as highly organized, systemic and
productive of democratic growth and replication. She examines
developments such as global surveillance, embryonic stem cell
research, and cloning, which have been characterized as threats to
the privacy, dignity, and integrity of the rational, maximizing and
freedom-loving democratic citizen. By shifting her level of
analysis from the politics of self-determining subjects to the
realm of material environments and information systems, Miller asks
what might happen if these alternative, nonhuman thought processes
become the normative thought processes of democratic engagement.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Concise, clearly written, and vibrantly illustrated, Langman's
Medical Embryology, 15th Edition, makes complex embryology concepts
approachable to help you build the clinical understanding essential
to your success in medical practice, nursing, or other health
professions. Hundreds of full-color illustrations clarify the
stages of embryonic development with rich detail, and engaging
learning features, clinical examples, and online review questions
ready you for the challenges ahead on your exams and in clinical
practice. NEW! Medical Embryology Animations, now included with the
purchase of the print book, allow users to visualize the stages of
human development and master the corresponding anatomical
relationships. UPDATED! Clinical Correlates boxes reinforce
clinically relevant content through realistic case-based scenarios
you're likely to encounter in practice. UPDATED! More than 400
full-color illustrations, micrographs, and clinical images clarify
key aspects of embryonic development in vivid detail. UPDATED!
Clinical vignette and USMLE-style multiple-choice questions,
available via digital access, with answers provide valuable
self-assessment and strengthen your test-taking confidence.
Problems to Solve boost your critical thinking capabilities.
End-of-Chapter Summaries detail key stages of development, terms,
and clinical conditions for each chapter at a glance.
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"The Atlas of Chick Development, Third Edition," a classic work
covering all major event of chick development, is extensively
updated with new and more detailed photographs, enlargements
showing regions of special-interest and complexity, and new
illustrations. The revised text and expanded illustrative material
describe the intricate changes that take place during development,
together with accounts of recent experimental and molecular
research that has transformed our understanding of
morphogenesis.
These wide-ranging updates make this book an essential resource
for developmental biologists, geneticists, molecular biologists,
poultry scientists, biochemists, immunologists, and other life
scientists who use the chick embryo as their research model.
Individuals joining this burgeoning area, ignited by the increased
insight into events surrounding organ and tissue differentiation,
will find this a valuable tool to help grow a basic knowledge of
morphogenesis.
Remains the established standard the only book providing a
comprehensive description of chick development from fertilization
to hatching
Contains more than 750 photographs and illustrations, including
410 labelled histological sections and 85 new high-quality plates,
showing the major anatomical events from the earliest stages to 13
days of incubation
Includes more than 200 labelled and detailed scanning electron
micrographs, showing various tissues in great detail
Leads the reader to important reviews on aspects of this rapidly
moving field, along with extensive and updated references"
In this fascinating book, Jacques Balthazart presents a simple
description of the biological mechanisms that are involved in the
determination of sexual orientation in animals and also presumably
in humans. Using scientific studies published over the last few
decades, he argues that sexual orientation, both homosexual and
heterosexual, is under the control of embryonic endocrine and
genetic phenomena in which there is little room for individual
choice. The author begins with animal studies of the hormonal and
neural mechanisms that control the so-called instinctive behaviors
and analyzes how this animal work may potentially apply to humans.
The book does not focus exclusively on homosexuality, however.
Instead, the book acts as a broader guide to the biological basis
of sexual orientation, and also discusses important gender
differences that may influence sexual orientation. While firmly
grounded in the scientific literature, this text is developed for a
broader audience and will be of interest to psychologists,
researchers, students, and anyone interested in the biological
factors that determine our sexuality.
Different technologies have been introduced to improve management
of labor. To date there is no single text that aims at covering all
these technologies that address different problems and issues in
labor management. The book reviews new technologies and devices
aimed to improve labor management and outcomes. These diverge
between looking at a better way to use fetal heart rate monitors
(that are used in 90% of labours); using new monitors to detect the
<1% of babies that are damaged in labor and account for 99% of
the medico-legal costs in labor; and early detection of
non-progressive labors that complicate 30-50% of labors. This is
the only book about all these technologies from the perspectives of
new devices and technologies in labor.
This book provides the first clinically comprehensive and practical
approach to ethical challenges in perinatal medicine.The first
chapter introduces and explains the professional responsibility
model of perinatal ethics.The professional responsibility model is
based on the medical ethics of two major physician-ethics in the
history of Western medical ethics, Dr. John Gregory (1724-1773) of
Scotland and Dr. Thomas Percival (1740-1804) of England.The
professional responsibility model is used to articulate the ethical
concept of the fetus as a patient and to operationalize the ethical
principles of beneficence and respect for autonomy.The book
provides practical guidance for clinical judgment and decision
making with patients about the responsible clinical management of
the wide range of issues encountered by perinatologists in clinical
practice and research.Topics included: periviability; feticide;
intrapartum management; maternal-fetal conflict; innovation for
fetal benefit; research for fetal benefit; non-aggressive obstetric
management; managing the transition from pregnancy to birth;
destructive procedures such as cephalocentesis; critical care for
the pregnant patient; home birth; patient-choice cesarean delivery;
neonatal care as a trial of management; and setting limits on
neonatal care on the basis of clinical judgments of futility.
The advent of robotic surgery brought a rise in the proportion of
minimally invasive surgery in gynecology. This book provides a
practical guide to this innovative field. First it introduces the
basics of robotic surgery and then focuses on specific
gynecology-related surgeries. Gynecologists currently practicing
robotic surgery as well as those who would like to include robotic
surgery in their practice will benefit greatly from this book.
Drawing on a wide range of interviews and primary and secondary
sources, this book investigates the dynamic interactions between
national regulatory formation and the global biopolitics of
regenerative medicine and human embryonic stem cell science.
Carl Edward Sagan's (1934-1996) one of the famous quotation was
"Who are we? We find that we live on an insignificant planet of a
humdrum star lost in a galaxy tucked away in some forgotten corner
of a universe in which there are far more galaxies than people."
From past to date, well-known molecules, enzymes, proteins, lipids
and carbohydrates are studied in the pathogenesis of several
diseases both as a diagnostic/prognostic biomarker and therapeutic
agent. The underlying mechanism of unexplained diseases and failure
of therapies are frequently studied with well-known biomarkers, but
remain unclear in many cases. As Dr. Sagan said other keys are
still waiting to be known in some forgotten corner of a body
universe, we find strength to propose that one of them can be the
growth factor with cytokine activity named "Midkine" This book
summarizes the extensive up-to-date literature overeview with the
lastest work of experts about midkine in a detailed format that
conveys its role as both a pathologic factor and therapeutic agent.
This atlas comprises a complete and extensive exposure of the
spatial and temporal aspects of human cardiac development as seen
with scanning electron microscopy. Apart from serving as a unique
overview on cardiac development in the human embryo, this atlas
gives an updated morphological reference of cardiac embryology for
topographic correlation and enables the projection of experimental
results in animals to the human situation.
This book grew out ofmy interest in what is often called "the
immunological paradox ofpregnancy." How is it possible that the
fetus-halfofwhosegenetic apparatuscomesfrom thefather and is
foreign to the mother-can survive to term? This is a question that
intrigues all immunologists. For me, it has been of interest ever
since I heard a lecture on the subject in medical school, long
before I thought ofbecoming a "professional immunologist." Indeed,
the question ofthe immunological aspect of fetal survival (or
demise) should be of interest to any biologist or physician. The
question becomes broader ifone considers the immunologic relations
between motherand fetus, because they represent a unique symbiotic
union. Whatimmunologic problemsinthemothermayaffecttheoffspring,
and isitpossiblethatfetal immunology willaffectthe mother? Finally,
there is the question ofwhether immunology is important in recur-
rent spontaneous abortion. Every authorowes the reader a general
oversightofthe book in hand, indicating the terrain to be covered,
and, by inference, the territory that will not be explored. 1. This
is primarily a book for clinicians. I will only men- tion animal
experiments and data in passing, and as they may illuminate a
clinical problem or observation. 2. The interest here is the
immunology ofmaterno--fetal re- lations, once a pregnancy has
begun. Therefore, I will notcover immunological aspects
ofsterility, nor touch on the immunological approaches to
controlling fer- tility, i.e., "contraceptive vaccines." 3. This is
a book mainly concerned with pathogenesis.
Master the essentials of oral biology with patient-centered
approach. New illustrations and discussions of emerging issues keep
you updated with advances in the dental professions and patient
care. Written by Daniel J. Chiego Jr., and Professor Sausan Al
Kawas both are experienced educators and researchers in oral
histology and embryology, this book provides the basic science you
need to succeed in the classroom and in clinical practice.
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