(Download) "Cardiology for Finals" by Dr Ross McKean ~ Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Cardiology for Finals
- Author : Dr Ross McKean
- Release Date : January 11, 2013
- Genre: Medical,Books,Professional & Technical,Textbooks,Medicine,Medical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 107282 KB
Description
Cardiology is a field of medicine that medical students commonly have difficulties with. Why does aortic stenosis produce an ejection systolic murmur, but regurgitation a diastolic murmur? How can you tell the location of a myocardial infarction from an ECG? What do the different waveforms of the JVP represent? These are the sorts of questions that many struggle to get their head around finding the solutions.
Medical textbooks attempt to answer these sorts of questions with reams of text, the explanations more often than not complicated and confusing. But this really doesn't need to be the case. Cardiology is easy so long as you can visualise the problem. That's why this electronic book is so useful; it is filled to the brim with animations and videos that are vastly superior to explaining the essentials of cardiology for finals than current revision material on the market.
Cardiology for Finals is recommended for your finals revision by Dr Clarke, the UK's most prominent lecturer in medicine with his course Ask Dr Clarke. Here's what he had to say about the product:
"Many of the most popular medical books are those with plenty of room in the margins so that you can write your own supplementary notes and make the text your own. Ross McKean has imaginatively used the new technology in this electronic book: not only can you add your own comments and reflections, you are also offered links to audio and video files and provided with clear explanations and interactive diagrams explaining underlying pathophysiology. All of this will help make the understanding of cardiology so much more rewarding than simply learning a few pre-selected lists. As this e-book is fun to use and pitched at just the right level for medical students, I very much hope that it is the first in a series. This approach is a significant step forward and Dr McKean is to be congratulated for creating such a helpful resource.
Visit www.ifinals.co.uk for more information.