David Jang

Deja Review Emergency Medicine - London: McGraw Hill Professional, c2007 - 250 pages

Deja Review -- Remember what you already know!

With Deja Review, memory retention is #1. No other medical review offers the last-minute study tools you need to cram right before the exam.

Get the competitive edge you need for the USMLE Step 2, with the proven Deja Review quiz-yourself method. Developed by McGraw-Hill, publisher of the FIRST AID series, in conjunction with Naheedy and Orringer, the Deja Review technique is guaranteed to help you with last minute retention of key facts right before the exam.

Why the Deja Review method?

Deja Review helps you recall important facts you already know. With Deja Review's quick-hit Q&A format, questions and answers appear side-by-side providing a fast way to assess your strengths and weaknesses. Simply cover the answers to test yourself or leave the answers exposed to absorb information right before the exam.

Here's why Deja Review is an unbeatable quick review:

A visual format designed for learning - 2 column format with side-by-side questions and answers
Only correct answers are provided - so wrong answers can't stick in your mind on exam day
High-yield USMLE essentials are covered
Clinical vignettes to prepare you for cases you'll see on the exam
Written by students who just aced the exam

0071593713 9780071593717 = abdominal pain abscess acidosis acute airway antibiotics aortic artery associated bacterial Benzodiazepines bites bleeding blood cardiac cardiac tamponade cardiomyopathy cellulitis cervical chest pain chronic common cause common clinical features commonly complications decreased definition diagnostic tests diarrhea disease disorder drug dysphagia dyspnea dysrhythmias edema emesis endocarditis esophageal evaluation exam failure female fever fluid foreign body fractures headache hemoptysis hemorrhage hyperkalemia hypertension hypoglycemia hypomagnesemia hyponatremia hypotension hypothermia Immunocompromised important causes important points important things increase infection ingestion injury intubation key points loss male medications meningitis mental status metabolic metabolic acidosis mg/dL nausea necrotizing necrotizing fasciitis nerve neurologic normal obstruction occur onset overdose patients pneumonia pneumothorax posterior pregnancy presents pulmonary renal respiratory risk factors rupture seizure Sepsis serum severe sodium spinal stenosis surgical symptoms syndrome tachycardia tension pneumothorax test of choice tests to consider tetanus things to know tissue toxicity trauma treatment typically urine

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LB2301

616.025 JAN