Publication of ENT Clinics in book form.Since the January 1993 issue of Ear, Nose & Throat Journal, we have offered continuous, monthly publication of the Otoscopic Clinic, the Rhinoscopic Clinic, and the Laryngoscopic la·ryn·go·scope n. A tubular endoscope that is inserted into the larynx through the mouth and used for observing the interior of the larynx. la·ryn Clinic. These clinics have featured high-quality endoscopic en·do·scope n. An instrument for examining visually the interior of a bodily canal or a hollow organ such as the colon, bladder, or stomach. en photographs of both normal and abnormal conditions seen by physicians in their daily examination of patients with ear, nose, and throat complaints. As a result of the overwhelming approval and appreciation of these clinics by our readers and the fact that we had accumulated a wealth of material over the previous seven years, we have assembled past and future clinics into atlases. The authors, with the cooperation of Medquest Communications (the publisher of Ear, Nose & Throat Journal) and Singular Publishing Group, have made this material available in three fine, separate publications. The Atlas Atlas, in Greek mythology Atlas (ăt`ləs), in Greek mythology, a Titan; son of Iapetus and Clymene and the brother of Prometheus. of Rhinoscopy rhinoscopy /rhi·nos·co·py/ (ri-nos´kah-pe) examination of the nose with a speculum, either through the anterior nares (anterior r.) or the nasopharynx (posterior r.) . rhi·nos·co·py n. by Eiji J. Yanagisawa, MD, and the Atlas of Latyngoscopy by Robert Thayer Sataloff, MD; Mary Hawkshaw Hawkshaw implacable detective with photographic memory. [Br. Lit.: The Ticket-of-Leave Man, Barnhart, 546] See : Sleuthing , RN; and Joseph R. Spiegel, MD, have been published and are available. The Atlas of Otoscopy by your editor and Christian Deguine, MD, is in press and will be available soon. The other authors and I are very proud of these works, and we believe that these three tomes will be useful and of lasting benefit to otolaryngologists, both as reference texts and for the training of residents. I hope that our readers will agree. They can look forward to the continued publication of the clinics on a monthly basis for the foreseeable fore·see tr.v. fore·saw , fore·seen , fore·see·ing, fore·sees To see or know beforehand: foresaw the rapid increase in unemployment. future. JACK L. PULEC Editor-in-Chief |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion