01874 a2200301 450000500170000000800390001702000220005603700360007804000070011404100080012107200130012907200150014207200160015707200110017307200130018407200140019707200210021107200210023207200210025307200240027410000180029824500270031625000060034326000240034952011480037370000240152170000270154520250526161922.0250430042012xx eng  a9781482212945qEA bTaylor & FranciscGBP 36.99fBB a01 aeng7 aT2thema7 aMQW2thema7 aMKSH2thema7 aT2bic7 aMQW2bic7 aMMPH2bic7 aMED0000002bisac7 aMED0800002bisac7 aTEC0590002bisac7 a616.075720762bisac1 aRobert Thomas10a100 Cases in Radiology a1 bCRC Pressc20120224 bA 36-year-old housewife presents in the emergency department complaining of progressively increasing breathlessness over the lasttwo weeks, accompanied by wheeze and a productive cough. You are the medic on duty... 100 Cases in Radiology presents 100 radiological anomalies commonly seen by medical students and junior doctors on the ward, in outpatient clinics or in the emergency department. A succinct summary of the patient's history, examination and initial investigations, including imaging photographs, is followed by questions on the diagnosis and management of each case. The answer includes a detailed discussion of each topic, with further illustration where appropriate, providing an essential revision aid as well as a practical guide for students and junior doctors. Making clinical decisions and choosing the best course of action is one of the most challenging and difficult parts of training to become a doctor. These cases will teach students and junior doctors to recognize important radiological signs, and the medical and/or surgical conditions to which these relate, and to develop their diagnostic and management skills.1 aJames Connelly4A011 aChristopher Burke4A01