Ophthalmology: Expert Consult: Online and Print

Ophthalmology: Expert Consult: Online and Print

Yanoff, Myron
Duker, Jay S.

314,08 €(IVA inc.)

Get the quick answers you need on every aspect of clinical ophthalmology and apply them in your day-to-day practice. The latest edition of Ophthalmology by Drs. Yanoff and Duker presents practical, expert, concise guidance on nearly every ophthalmic condition and procedure, equipping you to efficiently overcome whatever clinical challenges you may face. INDICE: Part 1: Genetics 1.1 Fundamentals of Human Genetics 1.2 Molecular Genetics of Selected Ocular Disorders 1.3 Genetic Testing and Genetic Counseling Part 2: Optics and Refraction 2.1 Visible light 2.2 Physical optics for clinicians 2.3 Light Damage to the Eye 2.4 Principles of lasers 2.5 Optics of the normal eye 2.6 Testing of Refraction 2.7 Contact lenses 2.8 Ophthalmic Instrumentation 2.9 Perspectives on aberrations of the eye Part 3: Refractive Surgery 3.1 Current concepts, classification, and history of refractive surgery 3.2 Preoperative evaluation for refractive surgery 3.3 Excimer laser photorefractive keratectomy 3.4 Laser Subepithelial Keratomileusis (LASEK) and Epi-LASIK 3.5 LASIK 3.6 Wavefront-based Excimer Laser Refractive Surgery 3.7 Phakic Intraocular Lenses 3.8 Astigmatic and Radial Incisional Keratotomy 3.9 Intrastromal corneal ring segments and collagen crosslinking 3.10 Surgical correction of presbyopia Part 4: Cornea and Ocular Surface Diseases Section 1: Basic Principles 4.1 Corneal Anatomy, Physiology and Wound Healing 4.2 Corneal Topography and Wave Front Imaging Section 2: Congenital Abnormailities 4.3 Congenital Corneal Abnormailities Section 3: External Diseases 4.4 Blepharitis 4.5 Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus (HZO) Section 4: Conjunctival Diseases 4.6 Conjunctivitis: infectious and non-infectious 4.7 Allergic Conjunctivitis 4.8 Tumors of Conjunctiva and Cornea 4.9 Pterygium and Conjunctival Degenerations 4.10 Ocular Cicatricial Pemphigoid/Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid Section 5: Scleral and Episcleral Diseases 4.11 Episcleritis and Scleritis Section 6: Corneal Diseases 4.12 Bacterial Keratitis 4.13 Fungal Keratitis 4.14 Parasitic Keratitis 4.15 Herpes Simplex Keratitis 4.16 Peripheral ulcerative keratitis 4.17 Noninfectious Keratitis 4.18 Keratoconus and other Ectasias 4.19 Anterior Corneal Dystrophies 4.20 Stromal Corneal Dystrophies 4.21 Corneal Endothelium 4.22 Corneal Degenerations 4.23 Dry Eye Section 7: Misc. 4.24 Contact Lens-Related Complications 4.25 Corneal and External Eye Manifestations of Systemic Disease Section 8: Trauma 4.26 Acid and Alkali Burns Section 9: Surgery 4.27 Corneal Surgery 4.28 Excimer Laser Treatment of Corneal Pathology 4.29 Conjunctival Surgery 4.30 Endothelial Keratoplasty: Targeted treatment for corneal endothelial dysfunction 4.31 Surgical Ocular Surface Reconstruction 4.32 Management of Corneal Thinning, Melting, and Perforation Part 5: The Lens 5.1 Basic science of the lens 5.2 Evolution of Intraocular Lens Implantation 5.3 Patient Work-up for Cataract Surgery 5.4 Indications for lens surgery/Indications for application of different lens surgery techniques 5.5 The pharmacotherapy of cataract surgery 5.6 Anesthesia for cataract surgery 5.7 Phacoemulsification 5.8 Refractive aspects of cataract surgery 5.9 Small incision cataract surgery and femtosecond laser 5.10 Manual cataract extraction 5.11 Combined procedures 5.12 Cataract surgery in complicated eyes 5.13 Pediatric cataract surgery 5.14 Complications of cataract surgery 5.15 Outcomes of cataract surgery 5.16 Secondary Cataract 5.17 Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, Causes, Morphology and Visual Effects Part 6: Retina and Vitreous Section 1: Anatomy 6.1 Structure of the neural retina 6.2 Retinal pigment epithelium 6.3 Retinal and choroidal circulation 6.4 Vitreous anatomy and pathology Section 2: Ancillary Tests 6.5 Contact B-Scan Ultrasonography 6.6 Fluorescein Angiography and Indocyanine Green Angiography 6.7 Optical Coherence Tomography 6.8 Electrophysiology Section 3: Basic Principles of Retinal Surgery 6.9 Light and Laser Injury 6.10 Scleral Buckling Surgery 6.11 Vitrectomy 6.12 Intravitreal injections and medication implants Section 4: Dystrophies 6.13 Progressive and stationary inherited retinal degenerations 6.14 Macular dystrophies 6.15 Choroidal dystrophies 6.16 Hereditary vitreoretinopathies Section 5: Vascular Disorders 6.17 Hyertensive retinopathy 6.18 Retinal Arterial Obstruction 6.19 Venous occlusive disease of the retina 6.20 Retinopathy of prematurity 6.21 Diabetic retinopathy 6.22 Ocular ischemic syndrome 6.23 Hemoglobinopathies 6.24 Coats' Disease and Retinal Telangiectasia 6.25 Radiation retinopathy and papillopathy 6.26 Proliferative retinopathies 6.27 Retinal arterial macroaneurysms Section 6: Macular Disorders 6.28 Age-related macular degeneration 6.29 Secondary Causes of Choroidal Neovascularization: Conditions Associated with Breaks in Bruch's Membrane 6.30 Central Serous Chorioretinopathy 6.31 Macular Hole 6.32 Epiretinal membrane 6.33 Vitreomacular traction syndrome 6.34 Cystoid macular edema 6.35 Coexistent optic nerve and macular abnormalities Section 7: Retinal Detachment 6.36 Peripheral retinal lesions 6.37 Retinal breaks 6.38 Rhegmatogenous retinal detachment 6.39 Serous detachments of the neural retina 6.40 Choroidal hemorrhage 6.41 Proliferative vitreoretinopathy Section 8: Trauma 6.42 Posterior Segment Ocular Trauma 6.43 Distant trauma with posterior segment effects 6.44 Retinal Toxicity of Systemically Administered Drugs Part 7: Uveitis and Other Intraocular Inflammations Section 1: Basic Principles 7.1 Anatomy of the uvea 7.2 Mechanisms of uveitis 7.3 General approach to the uveitis patient and treatment strategies Section 2: Infectious Causes of Uveitis--Viral 7.4 Herpes and other viral infections 7.5 Ocular infections with cytomegalovirus (CMV) Section 3: Infectious Causes of Uveitis--Bacterial 7.6 Syphilitic and other spirochetal uveitis 7.7 Tuberculosis, leprosy and brucellosis 7.8 Cat scratch and Whipple's disease: Bartonella-related infectious uveitis 7.9 Endophthalmitis Section 4: Infectious Causes of Uveitis--Fungal 7.10 Histoplasmosis 7.11 Fungal Endophthalmitis Section 5: Infectious Causes of Uveitis--Protozoal and Parasitic 7.12 Ocular toxoplasmosis 7.13 Posterior parasitic uveitis Section 6: Uveitis Associated With Systemic Disease 7.14 Uveitis related to HLA-B27 7.15 Sarcoidosis 7.16 Behçets disease 7.17 Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease Section 7: Traumatic Uveitis 7.18 Phacogenic uveitis 7.19 Sympathetic uveitis Section 8: Uveitis of Unknown Causes 7.20 Idiopathic and other anterior uveitis syndromes 7.21 Pars planitis and other intermediate uveitis 7.22 Posterior Uveitis of Unknown Cause-White Spot Syndromes Section 9: Masquerade Syndromes 7.23 Masquerade Syndromes: Neoplasms Part 8: Intraocular Tumors Section 1: Malignant and Intraocular Tumors 8.1 Retinoblastoma 8.2 Uveal Melanoma 8.3 Metastatic Cancer to the Eye 8.4 Lymphoma and Leukemia 8.5 Medulloepithelioma Section 2: Benign Intraocular Tumors 8.6 Uveal Nevus 8.7 Choroidal Hemangiomas 8.8 Choroidal Osteoma 8.9 Astrocytoma of Retina 8.10 Hemangiomas of Retina 8.11 Combined Hamartoma of Retina 8.12 Hypertrophy of Retinal Pigment Epithelium Section 3: Phakomatoses 8.13 Phakomatoses Part 9: Neuro-ophthalmology Section 1: Imaging in Neuro-Ophthalmology 9.1 Principles of imaging in neuro-ophthalmology 9.2 Optical coherence tomography in neuro-ophthalmology Section 2: The Afferent Visual System 9.3 Anatomy and physiology 9.4 Differentiation of Optic Nerve from Macular Retinal Disease 9.5 Congenital optic disc anomalies 9.6 Papilledema and raised intracranial pressure 9.7 Inflammatory optic neuropathies and neuroretinitis 9.8 Ischemic Optic Neuropathies 9.9 Hereditary, nutritional, and toxic optic atrophies 9.10 Prechiasmal pathways - compression by optic nerve and sheath tumors 9.11 Traumatic optic neuropathies 9.12 Optic chiasm, parasellar region, and pituitary fossa 9.13 Retrochiasmal pathways, higher cortical function, and nonorganic visual loss Section 3: The Efferent Visual System 9.14 Disorders of supranuclear control of ocular motility 9.15 Nuclear and fascicular disorders of eye movement 9.16 Paresis of isolated and multiple cranial nerves and painful ophthalmoplegia 9.17 Disorders of the neuromuscular junction 9.18 Ocular myopathies 9.19 Nystagmus, saccadic intrusions, and oscillations 9.20 The Pupils 9.21 Presbyopia and loss of accommodation Section 4: The Brain 9.22 Headache and facial pain 9.23 Tumors, infections, inflammations, and neurodegenerations Section 5: Neuro-Ophthalmologic Emergencies 9.24 Urgent Neuro-Ophthalmic Disorders 9.25 Trauma, drugs, and toxins 9.26 Vascular disorders Part 10: Glaucoma Section 1: Epidemiology and Mechanisms of Glaucoma 10.1 Epidemiology of glaucoma 10.2 Screening for glaucoma 10.3 Mechanisms of glaucoma Section 2: Evaluation and Diagnosis 10.4 Clinical examination of glaucoma 10.5 Visual Field Testing in Glaucoma 10.6 Advanced Psychophysical Tests for Glaucoma 10.7 Optic Nerve Analysis 10.8 Optic nerve blood flow measurement 10.9 Ocular Hypertension Section 3: Specific Types of Glaucoma 10.10 Primary open angle glaucoma 10.11 Normal-Tension Glaucoma 10.12 Angle-closure glaucoma 10.13 Glaucoma Associated with Pseudoexfoliation Syndrome 10.14 Pigmentary glaucoma 10.15 Neovascular glaucoma 10.16 Inflammatory and Corticosteroid-Induced Glaucoma 10.17 Glaucoma Associated With Ocular Trauma 10.18 Glaucoma With Raised Episcleral Venous Pressure 10.19 Aqueous misdirection syndrome 10.20 Glaucomas Secondary to Abnormalities of the Cornea, Iris, Retina and Intraocular Tumors 10.21 Congenital Glaucoma Section 4: Therapy 10.22 When to treat glaucoma 10.23 Which therapy to use in glaucoma? 10.24 Current medical management of glaucoma 10.25 Laser Trabeculoplasty and Laser Peripheral Iridectomy 10.26 Cyclodestructive procedures in glaucoma 10.27 Goniotomy and Trabeculotomy 10.28 Minimally Invasive and Nonpenetrating Glaucoma Surgeries 10.29 Trabeculectomy 10.30 Antifibrotic agents in glaucoma surgery 10.31 Drainage implants 10.32 Complications of glaucoma surgery and their management 10.33 Genes associated with Human Glaucoma 10.34 Evidence-based medicine in glaucoma Part 11: Pediatric and Adult Strabismus Section 1: Basic Science 11.1 Anatomy and physiology of the extraocular muscles and surrounding tissues Section 2: Evaluation and Diagnosis 11.2 Evaluating vision in preverbal and preliterate infants and children 11.3 Examination of ocular alignment and eye movements 11.4 Sensory adaptations in strabismus Section 3: Ocular Manifestations 11.5 Sensory status in strabismus 11.6 Esotropia 11.7 Exotropia 11.8 Oblique muscle dysfunctions 11.9 Alphabet-pattern strabismus 11.10 Paralytic strabismus 11.11 Other vertical strabismus forms 11.12 Amblyopia Section 4: Treatment 11.13 Forms of nonsurgical strabismus management 11.14 Techniques of strabismus surgery Part 12: Orbit and Oculoplastics Section 1: Orbital Anatomy and Imaging 12.1 Clinical anatomy of the eyelids 12.2 Clinical anatomy of the orbit 12.3 Orbital imaging techniques Section 2: Eyelids 12.4 Eyelid retraction 12.5 Blepharoptosis 12.6 Entropion 12.7 Ectropion 12.8 Essential blepharospasm 12.9 Benign eyelid lesions 12.10 Eyelid malignancies 12.11 Eyelid trauma and reconstruction techniques Section 3: Orbit and Lacrimal Gland 12.12 Orbital diseases 12.13 Orbital surgery 12.14 Enucleation, evisceration, and exenteration 12.15 The Lacrimal drainage system Section 4: Periorbital Aesthetic Procedures 12.16 Cosmetic blepharoplasty and browplasty 12.17 Injectable skin fillers 12.18 Cosmetic Wrinkle Reduction with Botulinum Toxin Index

  • ISBN: 978-1-4557-3984-4
  • Editorial: Saunders
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 1428
  • Fecha Publicación: 13/12/2013
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés