Clinical Biochemistry covers the core biochemistry that biomedical science students need to know, placing it in the context of human disease. Throughout the text, the theory is continually related to laboratory practice through the use of examples and case studies.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: David Cameron: Biochemical investigations and quality control
- 2: Tim James: Automation
- 3: Edmund Lamb: Kidney disease
- 4: Joanne Marsden: Hyperuricaemia and gout
- 5: Tim James: Fluid and electrolyte disorders
- 6: David Tierney: Acid-base disorders
- 7: Paul Collinson and Amy Lloyd: Clinical enzymology and biomarkers
- 8: Roy Sherwood: Liver function tests
- 9: Mike France: Abnormalities of lipid metabolism
- 10: Nessar Ahmed: Disorders of calcium, phosphate, and magnesium homeostasis
- 11: Garry McDowell: Abnormal pituitary function
- 12: Garry McDowell: Thyroid disease
- 13: Allen Yates and Ian Laing: Diabetes mellitus and hypoglycaemia
- 14: John Honour: Adrenal disease
- 15: Ian Laing and Julie Thornton: Reproductive endocrinology
- 16: Pat Twomey and William Simpson: Biochemical nutrition
- 17: Garry McDowell and Gordon Brydon: Gastrointestinal disorders and malabsorption
- 18: Gerald Maguire: Specific protein markers
- 19: Joanne Adaway and Gilbert Wieringa: Cancer biochemistry and tumour markers
- 20: Mary Anne Preece: Inherited metabolic disorders and newborn screening
- 21: Robin Whelpton, Nigel Brown, and Robert Flanagan: Therapeutic drug monitoring
- 22: Gwendolen Ayers: Chemical toxicology