Overview
The closest a student can get to the wards without seeing patients! Designed to teach through clinical cases, this text
offers 60 of the most common clinical problems in emergency medicine along with case discussion questions, clinical
pearls, key terms and concepts, and USMLE-style questions and answers to reinforce learning. This is an excellent study
guide for the emergency medicine shelf exam and the USMLE Step 2.
Table of contents
Part 1: Approach to the Patient
Part 2: 45 Clinical Cases
Part 3: Listing of Cases by Topic
Biographical note
Eugene C. Toy, MD Assistant Course Director & Clerkship Director Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology University of
Texas뾊ouston Medical School Director of Ultrasound Christus St. Joseph Ob/Gyn Residency Program Houston, TX
Barry Simon, MD Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine University of California, San Francisco Chairman, Department
of Emergency Medicine Alameda County Medical Center Oakland, California San Francisco, CA
Terrence H. Liu, MD, University of California, School of Medicine
Jorge Trujillo, MD Director, Emergency Medical Services, University of Texas Houston, Houston, TX
Kay Takenaka, MD Emergency Medicine Clerkship Director University of Texas Houston, School of Medicine, Houston, TX
Back cover copy
The closest you can get to seeing patients
without being on the wards!
Students need exposure to cases to pass the USMLE Step 2 and the emergency medicine shelf exam. This book presents 47
clinical cases illustrating essential concepts in emergency medicine. Perfect for the clerkshipand the USMLE Step 2,
each case includes an extended discussion, definitions of key terms, clinical pearls, and USMLE-style review questions.
This interactive learning system helps you to learn instead of memorize.
*47 emergency medicine cases with complete discussions
*Clinical pearls highlight key points
*USMLE-style comprehension questions with each case
*Primer on how to approach the patient
*Proven learning system improves shelf exam scores
밪uperior to other case file books.?
-Chang-Kun Choi, Medical Student, Midwestern University School of Medicine
밬sing clinical scenarios not only makes the reading fun and interesting, but it is far more engaging than sitting
down with a bulleted text and reviewing detail after detail. This is a much better way to learn clinical information. I
have not read a book like this before, and I certainly have enjoyed it.?
뺼ric Hossler, Medical Student, James H. Quillen College of Medicine
밒 LOVED this book! I would recommend this book to all third-year students?The book uses a clinical approach and
does not lose sight of the pathophysiology behind the disease -- GREAT preparation for being on the wards! The subject
matter is also deceptively detailed, with much more information than one normally finds in a text of case files. The
reader can use this book as either a rigorous self-test or a read-through introduction to the subject. Once again - a
GREAT text!?
뺼lizabeth Johnston, Medical Student, Emory University