The book is attractively produced. The histologic photographs are very clear and useful. In Wilcox's chapter on AIDS, excellent photographs are accompanied by line drawings to help explain the radiographic and angiographic abnormalities shown. In most chapters, authors have provided very useful tables for differential diagnoses.
However, I have some criticisms. Inevitably, in books with multiple authors there is unnecessary and irritating repetition, as in the descriptions of nodular regenerative hyperplasia and hepatitis C virus in different chapters of this book. There is also unevenness among the descriptions of biochemical and pathophysiologic mechanisms. In addition, there are some surprising omissions, such as the lack of discussion of the apparent absence of association between IgA nephropathy and chronic alcoholism and of the beneficial use of the transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt in the management of hydrothorax.
I would be surprised if specialists such as nephrologists or rheumatologists would buy The Liver and Systemic Disease for the use of a single chapter. In contrast, general internists might find the book useful as a shortcut to answers to many of their problems.
Reviewed by Laurence Blendis, M.D.
Copyright © 1998 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.
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