PEDIATRIC SENSORINEURAL HEARING LOSS. CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT

PEDIATRIC SENSORINEURAL HEARING LOSS. CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT

Editorial:
PLURAL PUBLISHING
Año de edición:
Materia
Pediatría
ISBN:
978-1-63550-011-0
Páginas:
250
N. de edición:
1
Idioma:
Inglés
Disponibilidad:
Disponible en 2 semanas

Descuento:

-5%

Antes:

145,60 €

Despues:

138,32 €

• Part I. Diagnosis and Presentation
Chapter 1. Functional Consequences of Hearing Loss: What?s Down Can Come UP!
Chapter 2. Presentation of Pediatric Hearing Loss
Chapter 3. Newborn Hearing Screening
Chapter 4. Audiometric Evaluation of Pediatric Hearing Loss
Chapter 5. Imaging for Pediatric Sensorineural Hearing Loss
• Part II. Evaluation
Chapter 6. Evaluation of Pediatric Hearing Loss: Overview
Chapter 7. Genetic Hearing Impairment
Chapter 8. Evaluation of Pediatric Hearing Loss: Infectious Etiology of Hearing Loss
Chapter 9. Evaluation of Hearing Loss: Acquired Hearing Loss
• Part III. Management
Chapter 10. Management of Pediatric Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Chapter 11. Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss (SSNHL)
• Part IV. Future Directions
Chapter 12. Questions with No Answers in Pediatric Sensorineural Hearing Loss

Pediatric Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Clinical Diagnosis and Management is a quick reference manual for pediatricians, residents, audiologists, and others who work with pediatric patients. This text distills the breadth of knowledge on this topic into one that is manageable and easily comprehensible.
Pediatric hearing loss is an incredibly complex topic replete with controversies, evolving research findings, and subtle differences in management and diagnosis with different types of hearing loss. Currently, there is no such manual for pediatric hearing loss and the literature that is available can be overwhelming and difficult to read as a quick reference. This text provides practical content for daily clinical use alongside CT and MRI images, audiograms, and algorithms.
The chapters distill this complex topic into distinct subsets such as unilateral hearing loss, congenital hearing loss, and sudden sensorineural hearing loss. Pediatric Sensorineural Hearing Loss addresses clinical questions that arise in daily practice by pediatricians and otolaryngologists and can be used by residents for preparation for in-service training exams or as a teaching tool.

Authors
• Dr. Anne completed her Bachelor of Science degree, Master of Science degree, and her Doctor of Medicine degree at Wayne State University. Her post-graduate training includes a two-year otolaryngology residency at The State University of New York, followed by completion of residency at University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve University. She then did a pediatric otolaryngology fellowship at Children?s Hospital of Pittsburgh.
• Dr. Lieu graduated from the Washington University School of Medicine and completed her otolaryngology training at the BJH/Washington University/SLCH consortium program. She obtained clinical research training at the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program at Yale University, then returned to St. Louis Children's Hospital for a pediatric otolaryngology fellowship.
• Dr. Kenna received her undergraduate degree from the University of Pennsylvania and her MD from Boston University School of Medicine. She completed a residency in Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and did her Pediatric Otolaryngology Fellowship training at the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine).