Fetus and neonate: physiology and clinical applications volume 1. The circulation
Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1993Description: 438; ill.,bibls.; BookFindISBN:- 0521423279
Item type | Home library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | Newcomb Library at Homerton Healthcare Shelves | WQ 210.5 HAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | HOM1748 |
The control of heart rate and blood pressure in the foetus - theoretical considerations, M. Hanson; regional distribution of cardiac output, A. Jensen and R. Berger; regulation of blood volume in utero, R. Brace; local and endocrine factors in the control of the circulation, C.E. Wood; foetal placental circulation, A.M. Carter; growth and development of the heart, K.L. Thornburg and M. Morton; circulatory transitions at birth and the control of the neonatal circulation, A.M. Walker; cardiovascular effects of acute foetal hypoxia and asphyxia, H. Iwamoto; effects of chronic hypoxmia on circulatory control, A. Bocking; persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn, S. Soifer and M.A. Heymann; birthweight and blood pressure in childhood and adult life, C. M. Law and D.J.P. Barker; recording and analysis of foetal heart rate variation, T. Wheeler; foetal heart rate monitoring - application in clinical practice, J.A.D. Spencer; doppler ultrasonography - techniques, K. Marsal; doppler ultrasonography - applications in clinical practice, B. Trudinger; assessment of cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation in the human newborn infant, J. Wyatt et al; structural and functional anomalies of the heart, L.D. Allan; management of foetal cardiac anomalies, J.M. Dunn et al; persistent foetal circulation - principles of diagnosis and management, S. Haworth.
Paperback
""The Fetus and Neonate"" is a series of practical, focused texts which concentrate on that critical period of human development, from late foetal to neonatal life. Each volume in the series examines a particular body system, looking at the physiological mechanisms which underlie the transition from intrauterine to extrauterine life, and the pathophysiological processes which may occur in this period. Each volume considers the application of new basic scientific knowledge to the clinical situation. This series should be a valuable source of information to practitioners and postgraduate trainees in obstetrics, neonatology, paediatrics and reproductive medicine, as well as to basic scientists in these fields.
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