Medicina Laboratorial e Patologia Clínica
Small Animal Cytologic Diagnosis Canine and Feline Disease, 2nd Edition
De: Anne M. Barger, Amy L. MacNeill
ISBN: 9781032192970
2025, CRC Press
Capa dura
Páginas: 548
Medicina Laboratorial e Patologia Clínica
De: Anne M. Barger, Amy L. MacNeill
ISBN: 9781032192970
2025, CRC Press
Capa dura
Páginas: 548
This second edition of Small Animal Cytologic Diagnosis presents clinically applicable information about the use of cytology in small animals and indicates when advanced diagnostic testing can be beneficial to diagnose underlying disease processes. It includes more images, additional cases, and a new user-friendly chapter organization.
This book discusses the pathophysiology of inflammation, cancer biology, and comparisons to histology to help readers fully comprehend the cytologic changes that can occur with inflammation and neoplasia. Also covered are some of the limitations and advantages of cytology compared to histopathology, important gross findings (e.g. body cavity effusions), and parasites and the associated diagnostic methods required. Further information is provided on oncogenes, reference values for effusions and bone marrow aspirates, laboratory handling of samples, and how to carry out certain diagnostics.
The book:
This book includes tissue-specific chapters focusing on diseases of a particular area, always in comparison to normal tissue. Each of these chapters concludes with various cases that include information on signalment, history, pertinent laboratory data, specimen images, final outcome, and the underlying pathology causing the cytologic lesions, when possible. With more than 2,000 superb illustrations, this comprehensive resource provides ample practical information for students as well as practicing veterinarians.
Preface.
About the editors.
List of contributors.
Index.
Dr. Anne Barger graduated from the University of Illinois in 1996 and after graduation, went on to a clinical pathology residency program at North Carolina State University. After completion of her residency, she worked for Antech Diagnostics for two years, before accepting a faculty position at the University of Illinois in 2002. Her research interests include clinical cytology and immunocytochemistry as it pertains to diagnosis of canine and feline neoplasia. Currenty, she is the deparment head of Veterinary Clinical Medicine at the University of Illinois.
Dr. Amy MacNeill graduated from the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine in 1998. Following a year in private practice, she returned to the University of Florida to complete clinical pathology residency and a PhD in virology and immunology. In 2005, she joined the faculty at the University of Illinois. In 2014, she accepted a clinical pathology faculty position at Colorado State University. Her research interests include isolation and characterization of canine and feline tumor cells and the study of poxviruses as anticancer agents.