Neuroanatomy: An Atlas of Structures, Sections, and Systems 8th Edition (2011) by Duane E. Haines PDF

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Ebook Info

  • Published: 2011
  • Number of pages: 332 pages
  • Format: PDF
  • File Size: 5.38 MB
  • Authors: Duane E. Haines

Description

Neuroanatomy: An Atlas of Structures, Sections, and Systems remains one of the most dynamic forces in medical education, delivering abundantly illustrated and clinically essential content in a rapidly expanding field of practice. Now in its Eighth Edition, this atlas continues to build upon its reputation as a premiere teaching resource, combining the best of both worlds—anatomical and clinical. New features include: even more clinical imaging and relevance, with 15 new CTs/MRIs and 25 new illustrations with nerves highlighted; new features that promote the understanding of neurobiology, including circuit drawings, 2-page spread summarizing hypothalmus, 2-page spread summarizing connections, and summaries added to Anatomical Orientation images; 50 USMLE-style review questions with extensive explanations and bonus Interactive Question Bank online, for a total of 235 Q&As offering self-paced review and exam preparation; 32 stained section photographs in Chapter 6, now printed in their original, accurate color, replacing the previous black and white versions.

Reviews

Reviews from Amazon users which were colected at the time this book was published on the website:

⭐This atlas has netted me some points on my exams, so I have to give it praise. I was scared about the black-and-white issue that people were talking about, but this book does have SOME color, just not on most of the cross sections. The tracts are indeed hard to follow, but once you figure out how to actually read the tracts, you’re off to the races and this atlas helps you understand the amount of ridiculous detail needed to ace medical school exams (e.g., know the positions of the tracts at different levels of the spinal cord in cross section, in relation to one another, how they are topographically arranged, and the arteries that supply those areas)Although the structures are heavily abbreviated in the tract diagrams, I find it is very helpful in testing your knowledge; you will know that you have studied enough when you don’t need to look at the legend. Giving away the structure names may encourage passive learning anywho! Best of luck! I haven’t used any other atlas, so I can’t comment on that. Works well for me.

⭐I used this book throughout neuro and found it VERY useful. The online edition (code) that comes with is very helpful too. However, take note that this IS just an atlas with minimal explanations. I used the book to complement notes and it worked out great. I also used Martin’s : Neuroanatomy Text and Atlas for more detail. But I would recommend this to anybody. The best part is the whole section of cross sections which go all the way up the CNS. it has a labeled diagram on one page and an actual cross section picture on the page right next to it so it is easy to visualize where tracts and nuclei are at every level. Plus it gives a corresponding MRI image of the section.

⭐This was a great atlas for the lab component of my medical neuroscience course. It did in fact contain good images that “stepped through” the brain in different sections. Overall, it was very useful.My complaints include the lack of color (not that the actual brain is very colorful, but a black and white image is a far cry from an actual section), the thickness of cuts (i.e., I would have liked to see thinner slices such that you have more sections per “step through” of the brain), and the mediocre quality of drawings (e.g., in the spinal cord section).

⭐I bought this book as recommended by my medical school and was very satisfied with the diagrams and images in this book. Just a heads up, don’t expect to read this like a novel, I used it purely for reference. But I recommend this to anyone who wants a great resource for understanding the anatomy of the brain. From my experience, there is little to no variation between new and old editions, so if you’re trying to save some money, go with an older edition.

⭐I bought this book for the lab portion of neuroscience and found it very helpful. They have wonderful pictures and diagrams to help the visual learner and the way they presented the pictures made it very easy to follow along while dissecting no matter what direction (anterior-posterior, dorsal-ventral, etc.). It also made the dissection test that much easier to study for with such detailed and labeled pictures.

⭐I bought this as a Kindle Book, which seemed great initially. For reading it is pretty easy – although I have been unable to change the highlight colors and the search function is really slow compared to iBooks and Adobe apps. Often my professors refer us to specific pages to read and in the kindle version I cannot look up those pages, which makes groups a little tough at times. (In the Netter iPad app, which I realize is not an e-book, the images are still labeled by the textbook pages. This was my first “ebook”, so maybe it skewed my expectations.)People love this book, but I am not impressed yet. The images are nice, but finding information in the text is a challenge. Even using the index, which is not great, I often spend several minutes to find one structure or concept. I thought that the search function would deal with this, but it often brings back limited results and they are text only. Perhaps I just need to own this book for more than a few weeks…Overall, I would caution a buyer about buying this atlas as an ebook. Try to find a friend who already has it and try to use it.

⭐This text wasn’t required, but I purchased it anyway. It is ESSENTIAL in learning aspects of neuro involving anatomy of the CNS, especially the tracts. If you don’t know what tracts are, then this is the book for you.I will mention, it’s not a traditional “text.” It consists of mostly diagrams. However, the kind of studying Haines helps with isn’t the kind where you need to read a ton of text. This Atlas has essential cross sections of every part of the CNS with numerous numerous nuclei and tracts. It’s a must have.

⭐I bought this thinking it would help my understanding of neuroanatomy or at least help with some of the pictures, but it’s just okay. It’s very cluttered and it seems like they just crammed as much info in there as they could. The pictures are okay.. The drawn pictures are standard (chicken scratch compared to Netter) with colors that remind me of faded curtains in a house from the 60s. I will say some of the real sections compared with drawings are actually pretty good; it’s really the only good quality of the book.

⭐Incredibly clear structure, well worth a look for UK medical students, FY1,2 and speciality training. Covers the anatomy clearly with clinical relevance included. It is easy to navigate and has both clinical and anatomical orientations of radiographs so suitable for anatomists as well as clinicians.

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