Clinical Neuroanatomy (Clinical Neuroanatomy for Medical Students (Snell))
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Average customer review:Product Description
Organized classically by system, this popular text gives medical and health professions students a complete, clinically oriented introduction to neuroanatomy. Each chapter begins with clear objectives, includes clinical cases, and ends with clinical notes, clinical problem-solving, and review questions. Hundreds of full-color illustrations, diagnostic images, and color photographs enhance the text. This Seventh Edition features new information relating the different parts of the skull to the brain areas, expanded coverage of brain development and neuroplasticity, and updated information on stem cell research. The artwork has been greatly improved. New Clinical Problems have been added, and updated Clinical Notes incorporate recent advances resulting from war veterans' head injuries and treatment. A companion Website includes the fully searchable text and 454 USMLE-style review questions with answers and explanations.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #44188 in Books
- Published on: 2009-02-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 560 pages
Customer Reviews
Clear, concise and comprehensive at the same time
Book Review - Clinical Neuroanatomy for Medical Students by R.S. Snell (0-316-80103-8) Alexander Tan, 5th Year Medical Student, Liverpool University 19/10/00
Learning neuroanatomy is like being in a huge maze. Mention it to any medical student who has just had their first encounter with it, and the most likely response you'll get is a heavy sigh. More often that not, medical students faced with the task of understanding neuroanatomy will lose their way and become disheartened as they go along. The subject is vast and complex. Some may end up never quite finding their way out of this maze for their entire medical lives.
In this day and age however, medical texts are becoming more and more user-friendly. Gone are the days when students had to learn from great tomes crammed with fact upon fact written in archaic prose with hardly a diagram or table in sight. Principles, facts and patterns that once took medical students ages to grasp are now explained in simple language and accompanied by visual aids. Current textbooks also concentrate on presenting information that has clinical relevance rather than just inconsequential facts. In fact, medical textbooks nowadays can sometimes appear quite attractive!
Oversimplification and omission of material however, may lead to an incomplete or flawed understanding of a subject. It is important remember that in neuroanatomy, there are a great number of important and relevant facts that are intrinsically difficult to understand. The temptation of taking short cuts will always seem a feasible option when learning neuroanatomy!
Snell's Neuroanatomy is quite comprehensive - it covers a wide range of topics from the neurobiology of neurons to neurodevelopment. At the same time, it is quite understandable. The language used is clear and concise with appropriate diagrams and tables. There is an emphasis on clinical correlations in this book as evidenced by the clinical notes in each chapter, which highlight the clinical significance of the information that has been presented in the chapter. Anatomy with little significance have either been omitted or given only brief descriptions in the book.
Clinical correlation is important, for all too often, students don't realise the practical purpose of what they are learning. Visual aids in the book include images of neuroanatomy in practice as well; quite a number of CT and MRI scans are included. There are also lots of illustrations, pathological sections and photographs. At the end of each chapter, USMLE type questions are provided. On the extremely rare occasion when the thirst for learning neuroanatomy is not satisfied, references to authoritative books and papers are given (yikes!). The whole format and overall presentation of book are similar in style to Professor Snell's more well-known clinical anatomy book.
This book will not give an instantaneous understanding of neuroanatomy but with enough effort and thought, the book does deliver. It shortens and guides one through the potentially confusing and long journey of learning neuroanatomy. All in all, this book covers enough neuroanatomy in sufficient detail to be a good reference text for students and at the same time is quite accessible (considering the subject it deals with) and would function quite well as a primary textbook also.
Good for review, Not good for explanations
While I agree that this book is quite clear and concise, it is not very good at explaining concepts. It is a bit too concise and throws out a lot of terms that you are assumed to be familiar with. If you are a neuroanatomists or very interesting in the nervous sytem, this is a great book. If you are a basic medical student, look for another book which gives better explanations about clinical symptoms and the reasons behind them. The questions in each chapter are also very good. If you are using this as a review tool or reference, then it's the book for you. If not, then I would suggest searching for another book.
Snell's Clinical Neuroanatomy
I've read this book during my university days, and it has come far in terms of the pictorial aspects of the book. It is very colourful, and has a lot of diagrams and illustrations, which make it easy to understand. But, I think that the amount of pure anatomy knowlegde you get out of this edition, in comparison to the old one, is lesser. I am not very sure about the approach to the topics, but Snell's always had this kind of approach anyway. However, the amount of knowledge you can get out of it, in my humble opinion, is lesser.




