Disponible:*
Bibliothèque | Type de document | Numéro de cote topographique | Nombre d'enregistrements enfants | Emplacement | Statut | Réservations du document |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recherche en cours... Science | Book | RESERVE 616.0756 T446FU, 1996 | 1 | Reserve desk | Recherche en cours... Inconnu | Recherche en cours... Indisponible |
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Résumé
Résumé
This text combines basic biochemistry, physiology, laboratory tests in clinical diagnosis, and methodology performed in the laboratory. This edition includes new chapters on DNA technology, tumour markers, and automated immunoassay.
Critiques (1)
Critique de Doody's Book
This introductory text presents the theory and practice of clinical biochemistry. The chapters are organized into six sections that cover laboratory principles, analytical techniques and instrumentation, chemometrics, laboratory management, analytes, and pathophysiology. The purpose is to maintain and extend the skill levels of practicing clinical laboratorians and to educate the new generation of students entering the field. Both objectives are effectively met by this new edition. The book is written primarily as a teaching tool for undergraduate medical technologists, clinical chemists, and medical laboratory technicians. The depth of presentation also makes it a useful review of the field for more advanced practitioners in specialties other than clinical chemistry. The text has been extensively revised since the third edition, and new chapters on topics such as tumor markers and nucleic acid-based diagnostics have been added. The book contains an appendix that includes reference intervals for clinical chemistry tests. This classic text provides an excellent breadth of coverage of the field, presenting essential material at a depth appropriate for undergraduates or nonspecialist practitioners. These features and the expertise of the authors make it one of the premier texts for teaching clinical chemistry to technologists and pathology residents. The book will also be a useful reference to generalists who wish to review the basics of the discipline. Earle W. Holmes, PhD(Loyola University Medical Center). Copyright 2001, Doody Publishing
Table des matières
I Laboratory Principles |
1 General Laboratory Techniques and Procedures |
2 Specimen Collection and Processing; Sources of Biological Variation |
II Analytical Techniques And Instrumentation |
3 Spectrophotometric Techniques |
4 Light Emission and Scattering Techniques |
5 Basic Principles of Radioactivity and Its Measurement |
6 Electrochemistry |
7 Electrophoresis |
8 Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry |
9 Basic Enzymology |
10 Principles of Immunochemical Techniques |
11 Nucleic Acid Techniques |
12 Automation in the Clinical Laboratory |
III Laboratory Operation |
13 Evaluation of MethodsWith an Introduction to Statistical Techniques |
14 Establishment and Use of Reference Values |
15 Information Management - Informatics |
16 Principles of Laboratory Management |
17 Quality Management |
IV Analytes |
18 Amino Acids |
19 Proteins |
20 Enzymes |
21 Tumor Markers |
22 Non-Protein Nitrogen Metabolites |
23 Carbohydrates |
24 Lipids, Lipoproteins, and Apolipoproteins |
25 Electrolytes |
26 Hormones |
27 Catechol Amines and Serotonin |
28 Vitamins |
29 Trace Elements |
30 Porphyrins, Iron, and Bilirubin |
31 Therapeutic Drugs |
32 Toxic Substances |
V Pathophysiology |
33 Cardio-Pulmonary Function |
34 Renal Function |
35 Physiology and Disorders of Water, Electrolyte, and Acid-Base Metabolism |
36 Liver Function |
37 Gastric, Pancreatic, and Intestinal Function |
38 Bone Metabolism |
39 Pituitary Function |
40 Thyroid Function |
41 Function of the Adrenal Cortex |
42 Reproductive Function |
43 Clinical Chemistry of Pregnancy |
44 Inherited Diseases |
45 Clinical Nutrition: Assessment, Therapy, and Monitoring |
Reference Information for the Clinical Laboratory |