This highly respected and famous book is a simple, readable guide to the accurate identification and interpretation of abnormal electrocardiogram (ECG) patterns, written for medical students, nurses and junior doctors. The emphasis throughout is on the straightforward practical application of the ECG. Generations of medical and health care staff have benefited from its clear-cut approach to this important investigation.
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Vendeur : Crappy Old Books, Barry, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : Fair. Some books demand years of study. Others promise, with almost suspicious breeziness, that they have made something ?easy.? The ECG Made Easy is very much in that noble tradition: a slim medical classic cheerfully suggesting that the interpretation of mysterious spikes, dips and jagged lines connected to the electrical behaviour of the human heart can, in fact, be rendered approachable. Bold claim. Endlessly reassuring title. Written by John R. Hampton, this 1997 edition belongs to a distinguished species of textbook: the practical guide that has probably saved generations of students from staring blankly at an electrocardiogram and hoping inspiration might strike. Instead of treating the ECG as a form of occult scripture available only to cardiologists and the especially smug, Hampton breaks it down into something a normal, sleep-deprived human being might actually follow. Or at least survive. There is something wonderfully optimistic about a book like this. The heart, after all, is one of the least casual organs available to us. It does not really reward improvisation. Yet here is a paperback from Churchill Livingstone, calmly stepping in to explain rhythms, intervals, axis deviations and assorted electrical dramas as though it were helping you assemble a sideboard. Not that the content is trivial. Far from it. This is serious medicine, but presented with the sort of plain-speaking confidence that has made the book famous among students, junior doctors and anyone else suddenly confronted with a tracing that looks either mildly interesting or deeply catastrophic. And that is the charm of The ECG Made Easy . It sits in that perfect overlap between intimidating subject matter and humane explanation. You can almost feel the author trying to prevent panic at the exact point where panic would be the most natural response. A book like this does not merely teach. It quietly tells you to pull yourself together. Now, of course, this particular 1997 copy has entered its second act. It is no longer fresh from the medical bookshop, gleaming with professional ambition and the scent of expensive revision. It is now a Fair copy, which in the world of Crappy Old Books gives it exactly the right sort of personality. A little worn, a little lived-in, perhaps carrying the faint aura of caffeine, deadlines and hurried page-turning. One likes to imagine it once belonged to a medical student on the brink of finals, or perhaps to someone who really did need the ECG made easy and was grateful that at least one person in publishing thought that was possible. As an object, it has a very particular appeal. It is practical, earnest and faintly grand in its promise. It belongs to that golden world of printed medical wisdom, before every answer was instantly dragged from a screen, when difficult knowledge came in paperback form and could be underlined, dropped in a bag or left open beside a desk in a state of mild emergency. It is a reminder of a time when learning medicine still involved a physical relationship with the book that was trying to stop you getting things wrong. So this is not just a textbook. It is a compact monument to educational optimism. A guide to the heart?s electrical mutterings. A well-thumbed survivor from the late 1990s. And, in its own quiet way, a rather lovely thing: a book that looked at one of the more alarming bits of medicine and said, with admirable confidence, yes, this can be made easy. Condition: Fair. Which is perfectly fitting for a book about interpreting signs of strain, irregularity and the occasional alarming episode. Sold by Crappy Old Books, naturally, because even medical classics deserve a slightly battered afterlife. Has a name on the book block fore-edge. THIS BOOK BEARS THE CRAPPY OLD BOOKS STAMP. IF THAT IS UNDESIRABLE PLEASE DO NOT BUY THIS. THE STAMP MARKS WHICH IS USUALLY TO THE FRONT AND BACK INNER PAGES SAYS SOLD BY CRAPPY OLD BOOKS WITH WEB SITE URL. IT IN NO WAY DEMINISHED FROM THE READING. IF YOU WANT A PRISTINE BOOK, PLEASE FIND ANOTHER BOOK IN BETTER CONDITION SOMEWHERE ELSE. N° de réf. du vendeur 6110
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