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Paperback Langman's Medical Embryology: [With Animated Tour of Human Development] Book

ISBN: 0781794854

ISBN13: 9780781794855

Langman's Medical Embryology: [With Animated Tour of Human Development]

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Long respected for its scientific authority, pedagogy, and clinical relevance to medical education, this comprehensive embryology text features outstanding illustrations and clear and concise writing.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Helpful

This book was very helpful for my graduate level pathophysiology class. It is understandable and has a lot of excellent pictures and diagrams to help with understanding concepts.

The best book of embryology

I am professor of Histology and Embryology in Pernambuco/Brazil. Of all books of Embryology I know, this is the best of all.It covers the basic subject without forget the molecular explanations. Simply the best one.

finally....

I first bought Moore & Persaud's Embryology for the colorful pictures and the easy-to-read font but I soon realised that although the illustrations were good for those of us that depend on a pictorial memory, the text that accompanied it didn't completely explain some of the more complicated concepts and a few of the pictures are also apparently incorrect. I started falling back when everyone with Larsen seemed to love Embryo and I hated it 4 weeks into session. I then got myself a Larsen but soon realised that it too wasn't the book for me (although I know many that swear by it). Larsen, I found was very repetitive and I'd often find myself reading a near-identical paragraph two pages on from one I'd just read. I also found that Larsen tends to deviate from a topic through his paragraphs and talks about other things that would happen at that particular stage of development (which is good in some cases but gets annoying when you'd like to take one structure and follow it through from the beginning to the end without being confused by OTHER things that are happening at the same time) I then stumbled across Langman in the histology lab when I saw the lab assistant using it. Since I found myself once again confused with Embryo, I bought a Langman while on holiday in Sri Lanka for half the price and never looked back. Langman clearly compartmentalizes the topics and minimizes deviating onto other structures while describing the development one concerned unless it is directly relevant. I found it much clearer and easier to understand. Unlike the clutter of images that Larsen would leave in my head, Langman left a smooth chain of thought which was easy to recall. I also found that Langman's summaries at the end of each chapter (although not being as comprehensive as Larsen's) were still pretty good. It also had some information that was not in either Larsen or Moore. But above all, it takes the biscuit for its simple yet awesome three-dimensional CG diagrams, that are unbeatable for those of us who are poor at 3D visualization (ATARI over PS2 anyday!!). The diagrams are perfect for a comprehensive picture of the 7 pages of text that I'd have to sift through if I read Larsen. It also has really good clinical correlations and photographs of numerous congenital diseases and abnormalities. Overall, I'd reccomend this book as my first choice for an embryo text book. It took me nearly 3 sessions to find out the hard way; don't make the same mistake I did. Anyone wanna buy my Moore's? Cheers...

For Medical School and Beyond

This textbook, now in its 8th edition is a classic. It is extensive and rather than giving a simple step by step account of development (although this is provided in nice tables at the front of the book) it encompasses a more scientific explanation than is found in other embryology texts. It is fairly wordy, but it is easy to pick out relevent information and diagrams are excellent, being numerous, well labelled and easy to understand. This textbook, which is both easy to understand and extensive makes it an excellent buy both for a medical student just beginning embryology, and later on when a more detail may be needed. The book has beautiful photographs which captivate the reader, and there are also nice clinical boxes which break up the text nicely and are also accompanied by photographs. At the end of each chapter are problem solving exercises for which answers are provided at the end of each chapter. This is the embryology textbook to buy. I wouldn't recommend any other. It will keep you company through medical school and beyond.

The embryology text book of choice

Langman's Medical Embryology is an institution - and with good right. Medical embryology is not necessarily an easy subject. The medical student will need all his or hers 3D imagination skills to understand how the human body is formed.Langman's is written in a clear and concise English. Often, when studying medical text books, you get the impression that the author has done his very best to make it hard to understand - just so you will know how clever he is. Langman's is not like that at all !The illustrations are very well done and the scanning electron micrographs are simply beautiful.Overall, Langman's Medical Embryology is probably as close as we get to the perfect medical text book.For your information, I am a third year medical student at the University of Copenhagen.
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