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  • Book
    Puneet Monga, Lennard Funk, editors.
    Summary: This book serves as a definitive guide to diagnosing shoulder conditions for trainees, general practitioners, physiotherapists, orthopaedic surgeons and radiologists with an interest in shoulder pathology. It comes at a time when the knowledge regarding shoulder conditions has vastly improved, with the shoulder sub-speciality growing at a rapid pace in terms of practitioner numbers, procedures and evidence base. It is unclear, in most circumstances, which single clinical test or indeed radiological investigation is the best for diagnosing a particular condition. In fact, the diagnosis of a particular shoulder condition rests on the four sub-components of clinical history, conventional examination, special tests and radiological investigations. It is often the case that all these sub-components are to be used in conjunction with each other as "clusters" rather than in isolation. This forms the basis of the cluster approach, which is the key concept for the title and content of this book. This book presents a practical guide for diagnosis, written by a select group of surgeons and physiotherapists with a special interest in shoulder pathologies, who have painstakingly extracted these relevant clusters for each shoulder conditions from clinical experience and published work.

    Contents:
    Part 1. Rationale of Diagnostic Clusters
    Clinical History
    The Conventional: Look Feel & Move
    Special tests
    Radiological Techniques
    Choosing the Right Cluster
    Part 2. Shoulder Pain Clusters
    Impingement
    Supraspinatus
    Infraspinatus
    Subscapularis
    Teres Minor
    LHB tendinitis
    SLAP tear
    AC joint
    GH arthritis
    Internal Impingement
    Coracoid Impingement
    Scapular Dyskinesia
    Part 3: Shoulder Instability Clusters
    Anterior Instability
    Posterior Instability
    Inferior Laxity
    SC instability
    AC joint instability
    Part 4: Neurology Clusters
    Cervical disc disease
    Axillary Nerve palsy
    Supraspinatus Nerve Palsy
    Brachial Plexus palsy
    Part 5: Radiological clusters
    RC disease
    Instability
    Fractures
    Tumours
    Shoulder Surgery.
    Digital Access Springer 2017
  • Book
    Inge Bretherton, Malcolm W. Watson.
    Contents:
    Dialogues with children about their families / Molly Reid, Sharon Landesman Ramey, Margaret Burchinal
    Developmental shifts in Oedipal behaviors related to family role understanding / Malcolm W. Watson, Kenneth Getz
    The bears' picnic : children's representations of themselves and their families / Edward Mueller, Elizabeth Tingley
    Five-year-olds' representations of separation from parents : responses from the perspective of self and other / Nancy M. Slough, Mark T. Greenberg
    Family relationships as represented in a story-completion task at thirty-seven and fifty-four months of age / Inge Bretherton, Charlynn Prentiss, Doreen Ridgeway.
    Print c1990
  • Article
    Smith BP, Reina-Guerra M, Hardy AJ.
    J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1978 Feb 01;172(3):353-6.
    Feces from 1,451 horses entering a veterinary hospital over a 13-month period were cultured for salmonella. A total of 46 horses (3.2%) yielded 1 or more salmonella-positive fecal cultures. Twenty horses were found to be excreting salmonella in the feces on admission, and 5 of these later had severe diarrhea associated with enteric salmonellosis. Abdominal surgery and other severe stresses were associated with all cases of severe enteric salmonellosis. Serotypes of salmonella isolated included Salmonella agona (15), S anatum (14), S typhimurium (7), S typhimurium var copenhagen (4), S infantis (2), S montevideo (1), S meleagridis (1), S drypool (1), and an unnamed Salmonella serotype (1). Seven deaths were attributed to 4 serotypes (S typhimurium, 3; S anatum, 2; S typhimurium var copenhagen, 1; and S montevideo, 1). A marked seasonal incidence is isolations was found with isolations highest in later summer to early fall and lowest in the spring. It was also found that horses can shed salmonella intermittently, and a minimal of 5 consecutive negative fecal cultures is recommended before considering a horse not to be infected with salmonella.
    Digital Access Access Options