This is an of the best book for anyone well vers in the field of occupational medicine and anyone with an interest in the historical aspects of medicine.
This is an of the best book for anyone well vers in the field of occupational medicine and anyone with an interest in the historical aspects of medicine. a certain number of specific chapters would be of interest to all chest physicians. From the perspective of a specialist in occupational medicine, I learned more from this turn than I have from any fresh text in occupational medicine, for the tome focuses on the diseases and frontages that often receive short shrift in standard verse s Drs. Shusterman and Blanc discuss in the overview their definition of unusual occupational diseases from saying, "Behind bulging folders upon asbestosis, contact dermatitis and carpal subterranean passage syndrome, for example, one may retain inconspicuous files with references to so arcane subjects as work-related lipoid pneumonia, industrial contact urticaria, or occupational scleroderma-like syndrome exposes such as these form the material for this issue."
The mass covers rare diseases that befall even more rarely in the workplace, so as occupational sclerodermalike syndrome associated with vinyl chloride. It also hides occupational syndromes that are the two rare and pathognomonic for a certain quantity of specific chemical exposures, such as chloracne to be ascribed to halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons. The dimensions emphasizes occupational diseases that are probably underdiagnosed, similar as hypertension and renal impairment secondary to lead frontage The editors made a conscious effort to stay away from excessively controversial occupational diseases, but, as they point without unusual occupational diseases and rare occupational diseases are through nature somewhat controversial; the association between disease and work may be based onward case reports or limited case-control studies. The editors and the individual authors have done an admirable job of presenting the case for work-relatedness of these unusual syndrome and the book stands as an excellent review of many topics in the area of unusual occupational diseases.
Martin Cherniak contributed an eminent chapter on historical perspectives of occupational medicine. His is a description of diseases similar as "potter's rot," "painter's colic," and others that illustrate the history of occupational diseases or syndrome unique to specific occupations. He discusses these in the words immediately preceding [i]or[/i] following of a shift from focus forward host sensitivity (potter's rot) to position as the cause of disease (silicosis). These diseases were not unusual in their day. Individuals who have not been able to management a historical review of occupational medicine would be serv well by way of reading this chapter. It make knowns us both how far we have arrive in occupational medicine and to what degree far we have to go
Daniel Hogan contributed a chapter upon the less common occupational dermatoses, which includes an estimable assessment of contact urticaria. This is a topic that is ofttimes left out of occupational dermatology main division s but is of significant clinical importance.
Paul Blanc and Jeffery Golden's chapter onward unusual occupationally related disorders of the lung would, of course, be of special interest to pulmonologists interested in occupational diseases. It reviews five les used by all pulmonary diseases (diffuse alveolar hemorrhage, lipoid pneumonitis, granulomatous lung disease, pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, and pulmonary vascular disease) and discusses the character of occupational and toxic exposing s in the development of each disorder. This chapter illustrates the importance of understanding the couple the pathophysiology of the disease and the mechanism of action of a toxin in order to identify unusual occupational diseases.
The book includes excellent reviews of unusual rheumatologic disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, renal diseases, cardiotoxicity, endocrine disorders, neurologic disorders, and unusual occupational toxins. The chapter forward cardiotoxicity is also excellent. It discusses in detail the mechanism of toxicity of each cardiovascular toxin identified and contains more detail than is usually raise in occupational medicine texts.
This work should be of great interest to anyone who has an interest in occupational medicine, and it is essential reading for anyone who has an active clinical practice in the field and has faced challenging diagnostic dilemmas of unusual occupational diseases. It provides a summary with of the first water discussion of a whole range of unusual diseases in a well-written and concise volume
COPYRIGHT 1993 American association of Chest Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group