

Surgical Exposures in Orthopaedics: The Anatomic Approach (Hoppenfeld, Surgical Exposures in Orthopaedics) [Hoppenfeld, Stanley, De Boer, Piet, Buckley, Richard, Thomas, Hugh A.] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Surgical Exposures in Orthopaedics: The Anatomic Approach (Hoppenfeld, Surgical Exposures in Orthopaedics) Review: Wanna do ortho? GET THIS BOOK. Way, way better than Netter... - This is such a fantastic book as an introduction to the concepts of achieving good exposure in orthopedic surgery! Of particular note to medical students about to start buying books for this fall's away rotations: I didn't, and I wouldn't, really fool much with Netter's Concise Orthopaedic Anatomy, 2e (Netter Basic Science) , since the level of detail just doesn't compare. If you're gonna read about an exposure, you may as well do it right and read about it in Hoppenfeld. Throw down the coin, since--after all--you'd expect that you'll be needing this book for a few years to come anyway! Look at it as an investment in the Match! Read on for reasons why... I write this as an about-to-start intern who used this book extensively on my third- and fourth-year orthopedics rotations during medical school, so it is mostly medical students who will find this review useful. This book almost definitely was over my head in large parts during my third year but started to click early in my fourth-year rotations after I had spent a good bit of time in the OR. I see residents referring to this book often, even the seniors sometimes, for a great broad overview of the "large menu of options" to "get to the bone and stay there", especially for fractures. Discussion of the rationale for particular approaches is somewhat limited (and is probably a discussion more suited to books written about particular injuries that would spark such a debate), but the "how-to" and the lending of understanding of the anatomy while in a particular approach is spectacular. The artwork is truly great and gives a good sense of three-dimensional anatomy, via "overlaying" layers of tissue overtop the dissection plane of interest. This is definitely contributory towards relating surface anatomy and palpable landmarks to where you'll be on deeper planes, as well as "just how far away that posterior interosseous nerve is that you don't exactly wanna go looking for." The setup of the chapters is highly consistent, organized, intuitive, and excellent for the thought processes in starting a case and gaining exposure, starting with an overview in each chapter briefly comparing and contrasting the utility of each of the discussed approaches, and within each section starting with the incision, going through the internervous planes, superficial and deep dissection planes, and ending with "what to avoid". The pictures tend to be far more helpful and superior than what is usually in Rockwood and Green's much more prose-based descriptions of exposures specifically relevant to a particular fracture, and I would very highly recommend this book as a supplement to that, for understanding sake, as well as for "looking good in the OR" sake. Many sections are included on "applied surgical anatomy" (a great place for third- and fourth-year medical students to start, reviewing the "just ortho-pertinent gross anatomy topics", if you will, and in a way that is highly applicable to the approaches). Chapters are manageable length, and the pictures give a great conceptual basis for what you'll see in the OR. Very possible and also absolutely critical to read these chapters the night before a case (and Handbook of Fractures or, if there's time, Rockwood and Green), before getting pimped by trauma attendings. Knowing as much as possible of the contents of Hoppenfeld made an excellent impression on my rotations. Pretty reasonable to "get surprised" in the AM by the post-call admitting resident presenting an operative fracture/patient you didn't know about last night, and "hurry up and read about this exposure real quick before the case starts" on my iPad, too, which was a bonus. Regarding pictures, indeed, intraoperative photos are notably absent from this book (unlike C. Jordan's "Atlas of Orthopaedic Exposures", which is based exclusively on photographic images, albeit in cadavers which make things uncharacteristically easy to visualize). However, I refer much more often to Hoppenfeld than to Jordan's book, which I also own, since Jordan's book lacks some of the conceptual and functional explanations of the anatomy. Jordan's book, like Hoppenfeld, is written from a highly practical perspective, and I like that part of both of these books. Both contain an element of "how to stay out of trouble", which is all so critical in surgical fields. Another point of comparison is that Hoppenfeld's kindle edition is much more viewer-friendly than Jordan's book, which did not translate well at all from print to kindle edition. The Hoppenfeld kindle edition is overall better (albeit not perfect, since there is still some flipping back and forth from images to captions). I have thumbed through older editions of Hoppenfeld that did not include full-color, and I think that this new edition is a full order of magnitude better. Indeed two-tone black-and-white in older editions may have been good conceptually, but it is nice to have something that registers better visually in your brain when you're just trying to memorize the images... Worth every penny for the new edition. One caveat to note is that Hoppenfeld, while very broad in scope, is not 100% all-inclusive. Perhaps nor should it be... There are a couple of exposures in Jordan's book that aren't very well detailed in Hoppenfeld, but I'd say Hoppenfeld outnumbers Jordan in terms of the overall completeness. I would recommend looking at the table of contents via the kindle sample to get an idea of what all is included. Reading the first chapter via kindle is pretty representative of the rest of the book's content. Hoppenfeld also has a couple sections on hip and knee arthroscopy for very basic principles and where to put ports, which is very helpful for medical students and perhaps very junior residents. Importantly, this obviated the need for me to get an additional esoteric book on arthroscopy just to know what was going on anatomically on the monitor. Obviously, readers would do better with other books for more advanced arthroscopic anatomy later in residency(my sports experience is also limited, aside from thumbing through Stephen Burkhart's fantastic technical manuals shoulders-- The Cowboy's Companion: A Trail Guide for the Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgeon and the newer Burkhart's View of the Shoulder: A Cowboy's Guide to Advanced Shoulder Arthroscopy ) but Hoppenfeld was notably great for my foot & ankle rotations. Definitely a semi-dizzying array of different approaches in the foot and ankle depending on the structure of interest, and most are covered superbly. I cannot compare this book to the Master series book on orthopedic exposures Master Techniques in Orthopaedic Surgery: Relevant Surgical Exposures , nor to Mark Miller's book on exposures Orthopaedic Surgical Approaches, 1e . Fellows would almost certainly be familiar with Hoppenfeld's atlas and would know the following information, but I'll state it: that more specialized topics as far as surgical exposure may be better covered in other books, namely in hand surgery with Schmidt's Surgical Anatomy of the Hand , Doyle's 2002 book (http://www.desertcart.com/Surgical-Anatomy-Hand-Upper-Extremity/dp/0397517254/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_nC?ie=UTF8&colid=2BRCVY7BFOBCH&coliid=I3MF5P2VUYPH7B), and the classic from 1984 Kaplan's Functional and Surgical Anatomy of the Hand . I am less familiar with these books, since I spent very minimal time during my rotations doing hand surgery. As a bottom line, if you want to do well both for your understanding and looking good during medical school rotations, as well as get a book you'll refer back to again and again prepping for the early years in the OR, get this book. It is worth every penny, and I have it both in hard copy for making drawings on pictures as well as on kindle for quick reference at the hospital. Get this book, and get Handbook of Fractures. Two absolutely fundamental bodies of knowledge with which to be familiar as a burgeoning almost-orthopod. Hope this helps. Happy learning! Review: Best in Class! - Certainly iconic, probably legendary! I used the first edition extensively during medical school and residency. Now, recently updating my library, I got the updated 4th edition -- still top shelf, even better than its predecessors!! This is by far (as most of the reviewers would concur) the quintessential work for learning operative exposure for surgery of the extremities and spine. For all orthopaedic, plastic surgery and neurosurgery residents, don't even think of starting without a copy! For medical students interested in any of these specialties, save some money, get a loan -- get Hoppenfeld! An absolutely amazing investment -- reads very easily as well!
| Best Sellers Rank | #264,078 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #64 in Orthopedic Surgery #108 in Physical Therapy (Books) #216 in Medical Anatomy |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (58) |
| Dimensions | 8.5 x 1.5 x 11 inches |
| Edition | 4th |
| ISBN-10 | 0781776236 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0781776233 |
| Item Weight | 5.2 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 741 pages |
| Publication date | June 15, 2009 |
| Publisher | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins |
G**Y
Wanna do ortho? GET THIS BOOK. Way, way better than Netter...
This is such a fantastic book as an introduction to the concepts of achieving good exposure in orthopedic surgery! Of particular note to medical students about to start buying books for this fall's away rotations: I didn't, and I wouldn't, really fool much with Netter's Concise Orthopaedic Anatomy, 2e (Netter Basic Science) , since the level of detail just doesn't compare. If you're gonna read about an exposure, you may as well do it right and read about it in Hoppenfeld. Throw down the coin, since--after all--you'd expect that you'll be needing this book for a few years to come anyway! Look at it as an investment in the Match! Read on for reasons why... I write this as an about-to-start intern who used this book extensively on my third- and fourth-year orthopedics rotations during medical school, so it is mostly medical students who will find this review useful. This book almost definitely was over my head in large parts during my third year but started to click early in my fourth-year rotations after I had spent a good bit of time in the OR. I see residents referring to this book often, even the seniors sometimes, for a great broad overview of the "large menu of options" to "get to the bone and stay there", especially for fractures. Discussion of the rationale for particular approaches is somewhat limited (and is probably a discussion more suited to books written about particular injuries that would spark such a debate), but the "how-to" and the lending of understanding of the anatomy while in a particular approach is spectacular. The artwork is truly great and gives a good sense of three-dimensional anatomy, via "overlaying" layers of tissue overtop the dissection plane of interest. This is definitely contributory towards relating surface anatomy and palpable landmarks to where you'll be on deeper planes, as well as "just how far away that posterior interosseous nerve is that you don't exactly wanna go looking for." The setup of the chapters is highly consistent, organized, intuitive, and excellent for the thought processes in starting a case and gaining exposure, starting with an overview in each chapter briefly comparing and contrasting the utility of each of the discussed approaches, and within each section starting with the incision, going through the internervous planes, superficial and deep dissection planes, and ending with "what to avoid". The pictures tend to be far more helpful and superior than what is usually in Rockwood and Green's much more prose-based descriptions of exposures specifically relevant to a particular fracture, and I would very highly recommend this book as a supplement to that, for understanding sake, as well as for "looking good in the OR" sake. Many sections are included on "applied surgical anatomy" (a great place for third- and fourth-year medical students to start, reviewing the "just ortho-pertinent gross anatomy topics", if you will, and in a way that is highly applicable to the approaches). Chapters are manageable length, and the pictures give a great conceptual basis for what you'll see in the OR. Very possible and also absolutely critical to read these chapters the night before a case (and Handbook of Fractures or, if there's time, Rockwood and Green), before getting pimped by trauma attendings. Knowing as much as possible of the contents of Hoppenfeld made an excellent impression on my rotations. Pretty reasonable to "get surprised" in the AM by the post-call admitting resident presenting an operative fracture/patient you didn't know about last night, and "hurry up and read about this exposure real quick before the case starts" on my iPad, too, which was a bonus. Regarding pictures, indeed, intraoperative photos are notably absent from this book (unlike C. Jordan's "Atlas of Orthopaedic Exposures", which is based exclusively on photographic images, albeit in cadavers which make things uncharacteristically easy to visualize). However, I refer much more often to Hoppenfeld than to Jordan's book, which I also own, since Jordan's book lacks some of the conceptual and functional explanations of the anatomy. Jordan's book, like Hoppenfeld, is written from a highly practical perspective, and I like that part of both of these books. Both contain an element of "how to stay out of trouble", which is all so critical in surgical fields. Another point of comparison is that Hoppenfeld's kindle edition is much more viewer-friendly than Jordan's book, which did not translate well at all from print to kindle edition. The Hoppenfeld kindle edition is overall better (albeit not perfect, since there is still some flipping back and forth from images to captions). I have thumbed through older editions of Hoppenfeld that did not include full-color, and I think that this new edition is a full order of magnitude better. Indeed two-tone black-and-white in older editions may have been good conceptually, but it is nice to have something that registers better visually in your brain when you're just trying to memorize the images... Worth every penny for the new edition. One caveat to note is that Hoppenfeld, while very broad in scope, is not 100% all-inclusive. Perhaps nor should it be... There are a couple of exposures in Jordan's book that aren't very well detailed in Hoppenfeld, but I'd say Hoppenfeld outnumbers Jordan in terms of the overall completeness. I would recommend looking at the table of contents via the kindle sample to get an idea of what all is included. Reading the first chapter via kindle is pretty representative of the rest of the book's content. Hoppenfeld also has a couple sections on hip and knee arthroscopy for very basic principles and where to put ports, which is very helpful for medical students and perhaps very junior residents. Importantly, this obviated the need for me to get an additional esoteric book on arthroscopy just to know what was going on anatomically on the monitor. Obviously, readers would do better with other books for more advanced arthroscopic anatomy later in residency(my sports experience is also limited, aside from thumbing through Stephen Burkhart's fantastic technical manuals shoulders-- The Cowboy's Companion: A Trail Guide for the Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgeon and the newer Burkhart's View of the Shoulder: A Cowboy's Guide to Advanced Shoulder Arthroscopy ) but Hoppenfeld was notably great for my foot & ankle rotations. Definitely a semi-dizzying array of different approaches in the foot and ankle depending on the structure of interest, and most are covered superbly. I cannot compare this book to the Master series book on orthopedic exposures Master Techniques in Orthopaedic Surgery: Relevant Surgical Exposures , nor to Mark Miller's book on exposures Orthopaedic Surgical Approaches, 1e . Fellows would almost certainly be familiar with Hoppenfeld's atlas and would know the following information, but I'll state it: that more specialized topics as far as surgical exposure may be better covered in other books, namely in hand surgery with Schmidt's Surgical Anatomy of the Hand , Doyle's 2002 book (http://www.amazon.com/Surgical-Anatomy-Hand-Upper-Extremity/dp/0397517254/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_nC?ie=UTF8&colid=2BRCVY7BFOBCH&coliid=I3MF5P2VUYPH7B), and the classic from 1984 Kaplan's Functional and Surgical Anatomy of the Hand . I am less familiar with these books, since I spent very minimal time during my rotations doing hand surgery. As a bottom line, if you want to do well both for your understanding and looking good during medical school rotations, as well as get a book you'll refer back to again and again prepping for the early years in the OR, get this book. It is worth every penny, and I have it both in hard copy for making drawings on pictures as well as on kindle for quick reference at the hospital. Get this book, and get Handbook of Fractures. Two absolutely fundamental bodies of knowledge with which to be familiar as a burgeoning almost-orthopod. Hope this helps. Happy learning!
B**D
Best in Class!
Certainly iconic, probably legendary! I used the first edition extensively during medical school and residency. Now, recently updating my library, I got the updated 4th edition -- still top shelf, even better than its predecessors!! This is by far (as most of the reviewers would concur) the quintessential work for learning operative exposure for surgery of the extremities and spine. For all orthopaedic, plastic surgery and neurosurgery residents, don't even think of starting without a copy! For medical students interested in any of these specialties, save some money, get a loan -- get Hoppenfeld! An absolutely amazing investment -- reads very easily as well!
D**D
An obvious classic!! Worth every penny!!
This text is a classic for many good reasons. Tons of great illustrations, mostly updated, superb anatomy reviews and explanations. it is also fairly comprehensive, and includes pretty much all the approaches you could ever need. A must for Ortho residents, students interested in ortho, or any practicing orthopod!
P**N
Four Stars
Usefull book!!
J**N
It is simply the best and most practical guide for surgical approaches
This is my THIRD Hoppenfeld in my 22 years of practicing Orthopaedics. It is simply the best and most practical guide for surgical approaches. I used to keep the hard cover edition in the trunk of my car, but am happy to now have an electronic version. The illustrations are superb and clear. It is one of the books that every Ortho resident must own.
L**7
Great reference for approaches
Great reference for the most basic approaches. The most helpful parts are the sections on potential complications and things to avoid. Images are okay but do not always illustrate the approach very well. Newer editions not substantially different than previous. I would buy again.
T**$
Phenomenal for med students
This is a terrific resource for me as a med student. As I have been told by many others ahead of me, this is an essential resource. I have the text book, too, but the Kindle version is a blessing, as I can always have it with me. I always use this to review approaches the night before, the morning of, and in between, cases. It has been worth it's weight in gold to me.
M**.
Excellent reference
A must-have for any orthopedics resident. The exposures are very clearly illustrated. Some of the techniques are a bit outdated but overall a very solid reference book.
ぶ**ん
拡大した時にぼけるため,サイズアップしてでも解像度を上げるべき。 字が読めない点は最大の難点。
A**L
This book is a vital resource for anyone serious about a career in trauma and orthopaedics. Easy to understand and use. An investment to last your entire career & office shelf must-have.
A**I
Il testo originale mi era noto e avevo già avuto modo di apprezzarlo. Nella versione Kindle le immagini risultano di scarsa qualità una volta ingrandite. Non sarebbe meglio realizzare una versione PDF? Ho l'impressione che la qualità ne guadagnerebbe, senza contare che ci si troverebbe davanti alla stessa identica versione cartacea, già familiare all'utilizzatore. Per questo adesso sono molto restio ad acquistare altri testi analoghi, ma più costosi, in versione Kindle.
D**R
Die internervous planes sind anatomisch sehr einleuchtend. Sehr schöne zeichnerische Darstellungen, wesentlich besser als unübersichtliche Fotos. Habe immer die neueste Auflage.
D**S
Bought it for exam prep.
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