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Product 537 of 1070

Leone, Angelini, Bruneval, Potena The Pathology of Cardiac Transplantation

A clinical and pathological perspective

ISBN: 978-3-319-46384-1

Edition: 1st Ed.

Publication date: February 2017

Cover: Hardcover

Pages: 486 p.

Illustrations: 220 ill.

Publisher: Springer

Weight: 2 kg
Delivery times, dependent on availability and publisher: between 2 and 14 days from when you complete the order.

Description

  • Offers a comparative clinical–pathological diagnostic approach to each phase of the cardiac transplant process 
  • Includes detailed, up-to-date pathological protocols
  • Features more than 150 color photos and illustrative cases to guide diagnosis

This is the first book to focus entirely on the role of pathology in cardiac transplantation, linked to the clinical perspective through clinical–pathological correlation, multidisciplinary team working, and collaborative research. It provides a scientific framework with up-to-date pathological protocols and classification schemes and guides the reader through the chronological phases of the transplant process in a step-by-step approach. Topics include end-stage heart failure with pathologies encountered in the native heart, current issues surrounding donor selection, the multiple faces of rejection pathology correlated with clinical management and immunology, other post-transplant complications, details of pediatric and combined heart/other organ transplantation, and a useful practical appendix. Many high-quality images and illustrative cases are presented, along with learning points and ample references. Transplantation medicine today is continuously changing as collaborative research into novel diagnostic techniques and immunosuppressive therapies translates into improved recipient management and survival. This book is aimed at practicing transplant pathologists and specialist trainees. It will also appeal to general pathologists and to physicians and surgeons involved in cardiac transplantation who need to understand the role of pathology in the clinical management of transplant recipients.