1. General approach to traumatic injuries Ryan O'Halloran and Kaushal Shah; 2. Trauma airway Colin Kaide and Andrew King; 3. Transfusion in trauma Brit Long; 4. Trauma in pregnancy Michael D. April and R. Erik Connor; 5. Pediatric trauma Manpreet Singh and Tim Horeczko; 6. Geriatric trauma Matthew R. Levine; 7. Head trauma Brit Long; 8. Facial trauma Norah Kairys and Zachary Repanshek; 9. Eye trauma Brandon Morshedi, John D. Pemberton, R. Grant Morshedi and Brit Long; 10. Cervical spine trauma Katja Goldflam; 11. Thoracolumbar trauma Terren Trott; 12. Neck trauma Christopher B. Colwell; 13. Pulmonary trauma Manpreet Singh and Dennis Kim; 14. Cardiac trauma Brit Long; 15. Abdominal and flank trauma Michael Gottlieb; 16. Genitourinary trauma E. Liang Liu; 17. Peripheral vascular injury Richard Slama and Mike Jackson; 18. Pelvic trauma Michael K. Abraham; 19. Upper extremity trauma Kristen Kann; 20. Lower extremity trauma Ryan LaFollette and Jeffery Hill; 21. Burns and electrical injuries Ashley Brady; 22. Procedural sedation and analgesia in trauma Steven G. Schauer and Jason F. Naylor; 23. Commonly missed traumatic injuries Matthew Greer and Brian T. Wessman.
A focused overview of traumatic injuries for emergency medicine clinicians, for use both on shift and as a reference.
Alex Koyfman is an assistant professor/assistant program director of emergency medicine at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Dr Koyfman is an author with more than 170 peer-reviewed publications and an editor of four books. He is Editor-in-Chief for emDocs.net. Brit Long is an attending emergency physician and assistant professor of emergency medicine. Dr Long is an author with over 150 peer-reviewed publications and an editor of two books. He is Associate Editor-in-Chief for emDocs.net.
'This is a wonderful introduction for providers in any discipline
managing injury at the time of presentation in the emergency
department. Concise, well-written presentations make this an
excellent bedside reference. After review of the opening chapters,
readers can progress to the organ system of interest. For those
less familiar with injury, comments on procedural sedation and
commonly missed traumatic problems are an important aid.' David J.
Dries, Doody's Book Review Service
'Overall, the book is very well organized, includes essential
information, and is easy and enjoyable to read. The text is
detailed enough to be a primary reference during emergency medicine
residency, although any practicing emergency physician would find
it helpful as a quick reference on the job … trauma reference books
oriented to the care of trauma patients before definitive operative
management, like The Emergency Medicine Trauma Handbook, are a must
read for emergency physicians.' Gabriel Morales, Annals of
Emergency Medicine
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