The Johns Hopkins Atlas of Human Functional Anatomy
The Johns Hopkins Atlas of Human Functional Anatomy Books
Product Description
Features 226 color illustrations depicting organs and systems of the human body. New to this edition is a two-page, full-color illustration of the interior of the male anatomy from head to thighs. Hardcover, softcover available. 28 contributors, all from John Hopkins.
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This is an brilliant reference for anyone who is studying functional human anatomy. This edition contains added in rank not found in previous editions. This additional in rank makes this reference manual more complete. I highly urge this manual for pre-med, medical, nursing, and other healthcare program students that are studying human anatomy!
Rating: 5 / 5
This book is a very excellent book for a beginning medical student. I bought it as a reference book for my medical transcription work because of the color plates (I hope Amazon prints a sample of one of the colored pages so buyers can appreciate how excellent the book is; they did print a list of the color plates). The illustrations are very excellent and very detailed, showing just so where everything is surrounded by the human body. What’s more, the illustrations are meticulously and absolutely marked in detail! This is what made me buy the book. It helps me envision where the anatomical part is positioned even as transcribing, which gives me a excellent thought of what to guess when a physician dictates a particular course of action on that part. There are write-ups by doctors prior to each illustration, so you can refer back to it every so often to know how things work and tie up together. A sample of pictures are: the complete illustration of the anatomical man, fetal circulation (with incredible close-up details of the placenta), the skeletal system, muscular system (with muscles, ligaments, fasciae, tendons, bursae), shoulder and hip joints, inguinal regions, hernias, development of blood cells, lymphatics, a really huge picture of the anatomical ear, mechanics of thought, and a composite anatomy of the vascular system based upon arteriograms and venograms.
This is by no means a definitive anatomy book (it is only 166 pages). For advanced med students this is not not compulsory. But for those without a medical background but who work in the associated fields of the medical profession (nurses and transcriptionists among others), this is a excellent summary-of-the-anatomy book.
Rating: 5 / 5