University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Text on the treatment of the dizzy patient, for neurologists, otolaryngologists, physical therapists, and audiologists. Topics include surgical patient selection and the basics of vestibular system function. DNLM: Vestibular Diseases - diagnosis.
Customer Reviews:
Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 / 5.0
a book you must read to be a expert:
The book is not written for beginners. It offers keypoint concepts of the basic balance physiology and the vestibular funcion tests. If you are ever puzzled by the conflicts of those results in vestibular function tests and can't figure out which test or tests to relay on during your clinical evaluation, you would feel wonderful after you read it . You must read it to be a expert but it certaintely isn't your first book .
The Practical Management of the Balance Disorder Patient:
As a first year graduate student in Audiology, this book, at first glance seemed like an impossible read. The writing is extremely dry and medically based. After finally getting through the first chapter, the rest seemed to be significantly easier. All in all, it has been an extremely informative book and will be an important addition to my permanant reference collection. For anyone interested in the testing and diagnosing of balance disorders, this is an essential read.
A must-have reference:
An excellent resource for any medical professional involved in caring for patients with vertigo or unsteadiness. The approach is clear and concise, with many sample cases. This is the only text I've seen which provides a logical, stepwise and complete approach to the difficult task of diagnosis and treatment for this group of patients. The included normative data wil be very helpful for those just starting to build a balance assessment testing program.