Anatomy Recall by Lorne H. Blackbourne, MD, FACS
Anatomy Recall, Second Edition is a concise, affordable, pocket-sized review of the fundamentals of human anatomy. As part of the popular Recall Series , it utilizes a two-column, question-and-answer format that facilitates quick learning of human anatomic facts through repetition.
While not intended as a comprehensive anatomy reference, Anatomy Recall highlights the most important anatomic principles, which are complemented by a wealth of illustrations and anatomic correlations to clinical problems. It is an ideal study guide for medical students in their pre-clinical coursework, undergraduate or nursing anatomy study, clinical rotations, and board review.
New to this Edition:
Anatomy Recall, Second Edition has everything you need for fast learning and recall-and nothing you don't. You won't find a better, more efficient or effective way to master the basics of anatomy.
While not intended as a comprehensive anatomy reference, Anatomy Recall highlights the most important anatomic principles, which are complemented by a wealth of illustrations and anatomic correlations to clinical problems. It is an ideal study guide for medical students in their pre-clinical coursework, undergraduate or nursing anatomy study, clinical rotations, and board review.
New to this Edition:
- Updated by expert authors, including anatomists, medical students, and surgeons
- Expanded coverage now includes embryology highlights, summarizing the key anatomic principles of human embryology
- Clinical Pearls emphasize important clinical correlations to anatomic principles
- Surgical Anatomy Pearls help third- and fourth-year medical students to prepare quickly for the most common intraoperative anatomy questions
- Power Review sections help focus last-minute review of the most commonly tested anatomy points
- Numerous effective illustrations allow correlation of factual information with key anatomical relationships
Anatomy Recall, Second Edition has everything you need for fast learning and recall-and nothing you don't. You won't find a better, more efficient or effective way to master the basics of anatomy.