Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /

Dr. Jean Lintermans came to Seattle in 1962 from his general pediatric residency at the University of Iowa. He worked with us in clinical pediatric cardiology and in our animal physiology laboratory for the next three years. He was the most productive individual in the history of our training program, publishing seven papers in those three years, four clinical papers and three involving pulsed ultrasonic flowmeters and implanted ultrasonic displacement devices in animals. The work, from laboratory to publication, was always done with the utmost attention to accuracy, and was well developed conceptually. Although English was not his native language, Jean's mastery of English was not only excellent, I felt that he actually communicated better than many of our native physicians. During the past year, I was delighted to learn that Jean was preparing a textbook on pediatric echocardiography with Dr. van Dorp, and was even more pleased to be asked to write a foreword .. However, the greatest pleasure came from actually reading this book, and finding that it does indeed have a unique approach, and with the additional genuine benefit to the reader of a thorough, consistent, segmental approach to the diagnosis of congenital heart disease.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lintermans, Jean Paul. author., Dorp, Willem Gerrit van. author., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1981
Subjects:Medicine., Radiology., Pediatrics., Medicine & Public Health., Ultrasound.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-67515-7
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id KOHA-OAI-TEST:215619
record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Medicine.
Radiology.
Pediatrics.
Medicine & Public Health.
Ultrasound.
Pediatrics.
Medicine.
Radiology.
Pediatrics.
Medicine & Public Health.
Ultrasound.
Pediatrics.
spellingShingle Medicine.
Radiology.
Pediatrics.
Medicine & Public Health.
Ultrasound.
Pediatrics.
Medicine.
Radiology.
Pediatrics.
Medicine & Public Health.
Ultrasound.
Pediatrics.
Lintermans, Jean Paul. author.
Dorp, Willem Gerrit van. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /
description Dr. Jean Lintermans came to Seattle in 1962 from his general pediatric residency at the University of Iowa. He worked with us in clinical pediatric cardiology and in our animal physiology laboratory for the next three years. He was the most productive individual in the history of our training program, publishing seven papers in those three years, four clinical papers and three involving pulsed ultrasonic flowmeters and implanted ultrasonic displacement devices in animals. The work, from laboratory to publication, was always done with the utmost attention to accuracy, and was well developed conceptually. Although English was not his native language, Jean's mastery of English was not only excellent, I felt that he actually communicated better than many of our native physicians. During the past year, I was delighted to learn that Jean was preparing a textbook on pediatric echocardiography with Dr. van Dorp, and was even more pleased to be asked to write a foreword .. However, the greatest pleasure came from actually reading this book, and finding that it does indeed have a unique approach, and with the additional genuine benefit to the reader of a thorough, consistent, segmental approach to the diagnosis of congenital heart disease.
format Texto
topic_facet Medicine.
Radiology.
Pediatrics.
Medicine & Public Health.
Ultrasound.
Pediatrics.
author Lintermans, Jean Paul. author.
Dorp, Willem Gerrit van. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Lintermans, Jean Paul. author.
Dorp, Willem Gerrit van. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Lintermans, Jean Paul. author.
title Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /
title_short Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /
title_full Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Differential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] /
title_sort differential diagnosis in pediatric echocardiography [electronic resource] /
publisher Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
publishDate 1981
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-67515-7
work_keys_str_mv AT lintermansjeanpaulauthor differentialdiagnosisinpediatricechocardiographyelectronicresource
AT dorpwillemgerritvanauthor differentialdiagnosisinpediatricechocardiographyelectronicresource
AT springerlinkonlineservice differentialdiagnosisinpediatricechocardiographyelectronicresource
_version_ 1756269503713378304
spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2156192018-07-30T23:50:34ZDifferential Diagnosis in Pediatric Echocardiography [electronic resource] / Lintermans, Jean Paul. author. Dorp, Willem Gerrit van. author. SpringerLink (Online service) textBerlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,1981.engDr. Jean Lintermans came to Seattle in 1962 from his general pediatric residency at the University of Iowa. He worked with us in clinical pediatric cardiology and in our animal physiology laboratory for the next three years. He was the most productive individual in the history of our training program, publishing seven papers in those three years, four clinical papers and three involving pulsed ultrasonic flowmeters and implanted ultrasonic displacement devices in animals. The work, from laboratory to publication, was always done with the utmost attention to accuracy, and was well developed conceptually. Although English was not his native language, Jean's mastery of English was not only excellent, I felt that he actually communicated better than many of our native physicians. During the past year, I was delighted to learn that Jean was preparing a textbook on pediatric echocardiography with Dr. van Dorp, and was even more pleased to be asked to write a foreword .. However, the greatest pleasure came from actually reading this book, and finding that it does indeed have a unique approach, and with the additional genuine benefit to the reader of a thorough, consistent, segmental approach to the diagnosis of congenital heart disease.Qualitative Anatomy -- Abnormal Location of Cardiac Segments -- 1 Abnormal Location of the Atria -- 2 Abnormal Location of the Ventricles -- 3 Abnormal Location of the Great Arteries -- Absence of Normally Present Structures -- 4 Discontinuity in Cardiac Structures -- 5 Simultaneous Visualization of Two AV Valves Without IVS -- 6 AV Valve Crossing the Interventricular Septum -- 7 Visualization of a Single AV Valve -- Presence of Normally Absent Structures -- 8 Echo-Free Spaces -- 9 Unusual, Abnormal Echoes -- Quantitative Anatomy -- Abnormal Valve Motion -- 10 Abnormal Pulmonary Valve Motion -- 11 Abnormal Aortic Valve Motion -- 12 Abnormal Tricuspid Valve Motion -- 13 Abnormal Mitral Valve Motion -- Abnormal Dimensions and Wall Motion or Thickness -- 14 Abnormal Right Atrial Size -- 15 Abnormal Left Atrial Size and Wall Motion -- 16 Abnormal Right Ventricular Size and Wall Thickness -- 17 Abnormal Left Ventricular Size and Wall Motion -- 18 Abnormal Dimension of the Pulmonary Artery -- 19 Abnormal Dimension of the Aorta -- 20 Asymmetric Septal Hypertrophy -- 21 Abnormal Septal Motion -- Function -- Contrast Echocardiography -- 22 Abnormal Contrast Pathways -- Functional Parameters -- 23 Systolic Time Intervals -- 24 Left Ventricular Performance -- Normal Echocardiographic Values -- References.Dr. Jean Lintermans came to Seattle in 1962 from his general pediatric residency at the University of Iowa. He worked with us in clinical pediatric cardiology and in our animal physiology laboratory for the next three years. He was the most productive individual in the history of our training program, publishing seven papers in those three years, four clinical papers and three involving pulsed ultrasonic flowmeters and implanted ultrasonic displacement devices in animals. The work, from laboratory to publication, was always done with the utmost attention to accuracy, and was well developed conceptually. Although English was not his native language, Jean's mastery of English was not only excellent, I felt that he actually communicated better than many of our native physicians. During the past year, I was delighted to learn that Jean was preparing a textbook on pediatric echocardiography with Dr. van Dorp, and was even more pleased to be asked to write a foreword .. However, the greatest pleasure came from actually reading this book, and finding that it does indeed have a unique approach, and with the additional genuine benefit to the reader of a thorough, consistent, segmental approach to the diagnosis of congenital heart disease.Medicine.Radiology.Pediatrics.Medicine & Public Health.Ultrasound.Pediatrics.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-67515-7URN:ISBN:9783642675157