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The single most important lesson we hope you will derive from this book is to always keep it simple because, in trauma surgery, the simple stuff works. This book will help you take a badly wounded patient to the operating room, organize yourself and your team, do battle with some vicious injuries and come out with the best possible result. It is a practical guide to operative trauma surgery for residents and registrars, for general surgeons with an interest in trauma, and for isolated surgeons operating on wounded patients in military, rural or humanitarian settings. A surgical atlas may show you what to do with your hands but not how to think, plan and improvise. Here you will find practical advice on how to use your head as well as your hands when operating on a massively bleeding trauma patient. The first part of this book presents some general principles of trauma surgery. The second part is about trauma surgery as a contact sport. Here we show you how to deal with specific injuries to the abdomen, chest, neck and peripheral vessels. Review: I freakin love this book! - I was recently reminded of this book during an online discussion about surgical texts. My residency program was not heavy on penetrating trauma so I purchased Top Knife a few years ago as a "How To" guide for the oral boards. I could not have been more pleased with that decision. Top Knife is succinct yet detailed, timely yet timeless and dare I say it, funny! Several times throughout the book the authors will state something to the effect of. "The books tell you to do X; we have never been able to get X to work. If you can, please share your secret with us!" Maybe I'm easily amused but those passages made me laugh out loud as most books are filled with impractical advice that would never work outside of BMS or some other rarified theatre. We now recommend this to our residents as reading for their trauma rotation and board exams. It's that good. Review: The best medical book I read bar none. - Basic science and ABSITE knowledge is one thing. Which frankly is relatively easy to achieve if you are good at self-study. The wisdom and operative pearls shared shared by these masters, gained through incredibly vast experience, is something totally different. It is almost like cheating to have this book compared to those who don't. Only objection is that it is a bit old (2004) and some things have changed... like the emergence of better IR and endovascular techniques. And it is not intended to be a detailed technical reference. But the Yoda-like wisdom remains. Not only for trauma surgeons but all acute care or general surgeons. I never even write reviews. It is that good.
| Best Sellers Rank | #44,123 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1 in Trauma Surgery #13 in Critical Care #15 in General Surgery |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 362 Reviews |
W**A
I freakin love this book!
I was recently reminded of this book during an online discussion about surgical texts. My residency program was not heavy on penetrating trauma so I purchased Top Knife a few years ago as a "How To" guide for the oral boards. I could not have been more pleased with that decision. Top Knife is succinct yet detailed, timely yet timeless and dare I say it, funny! Several times throughout the book the authors will state something to the effect of. "The books tell you to do X; we have never been able to get X to work. If you can, please share your secret with us!" Maybe I'm easily amused but those passages made me laugh out loud as most books are filled with impractical advice that would never work outside of BMS or some other rarified theatre. We now recommend this to our residents as reading for their trauma rotation and board exams. It's that good.
Y**O
The best medical book I read bar none.
Basic science and ABSITE knowledge is one thing. Which frankly is relatively easy to achieve if you are good at self-study. The wisdom and operative pearls shared shared by these masters, gained through incredibly vast experience, is something totally different. It is almost like cheating to have this book compared to those who don't. Only objection is that it is a bit old (2004) and some things have changed... like the emergence of better IR and endovascular techniques. And it is not intended to be a detailed technical reference. But the Yoda-like wisdom remains. Not only for trauma surgeons but all acute care or general surgeons. I never even write reviews. It is that good.
A**E
great book
I lost my first copy and had to get another(I personally think someone stole it when they saw how great it was!) This is the book to get for the no-nonsense guide to trauma surgery. It tells you to use your team and common sense to ensure that you have success much more often then failure. At one point they say the best thing to do after you have stopped the bleeding is to STOP!( it's capitalized in the book too!) They say too many problems stem from people diving head-long into fixing it without taking the time to see the big picture."Stop to organize and optimize your attack". I must tell you though I am only an EMT, not a trauma surgeon, but the book makes for some great information to know,
M**N
Must have for a General Surgery resident
For any Surgery resident, this book is a life saver and an absolute must-have. The book explains, trauma surgery in a concise no-nonsense format. Written by two masters in Trauma Surgery, the book is what I call "distilled wisdom". It gives you what to do, what not to do, and with out the pages of data that other larger textbooks include. And even though it may be hard to believe, all the answers are in the book. I found this book during my first year of Residency, and since then, have made sure all my younger residents have bought a copy and read it. Another book similar to this jewel is Schein's Common Sense Emergency Abdominal Surgery: An Unconventional Book for Trainees and Thinking Surgeons . I recommend both to every resident I can.
J**Y
Best surgery book ever
the title says all you really need to know. This book presents a logical and often comical approach to the surgical trauma patient. While some parts may be outdated or controversial in our age of ebm, the core components of how to approach a crashing patient who has suffered penetrating trauma have not changed. This book was clearly written by a Trauma surgeon for surgeons. It is my favorite medical book and i wish that this style of writing was more common as it makes for a quick and memorable read.
A**S
Critically important information in a clear, simple book
This book was indescribably helpful while I was a general surgery resident and an Army surgeon deployed to Afghanistan. It rivals Carol Scott-Connor's book 'Chassin's Operative Surgery' as my favorite surgery book. This book boils down complex maneuvers and trauma mind frame into a delivery that is accessible to everyone. Drs Maddox and Asher chose to share their unparalleled experience with the rest of us, and I am every grateful. Highly recommend this book for all surgeons, because you think you may not be in the position to deal with some of these emergencies... But you know how life can be.
D**E
A good book; is specifically aimed at senior level surgical residents and practicing surgeons
This is a well-written and easy-to-read book that tackles its subject in a conversational style. In the introduction, the authors state clearly that their goal is to educate general surgeons in the basics of trauma surgery and that they focus exclusively on the work that needs to be done in the operating room. Readers interested in the care of the trauma patient before or after the operating room should look elsewhere. In addition, the book is aimed at surgeons who are already familiar with elective surgeries and focuses on the differences between those elective procedures and the emergent procedures required for trauma victims. As such, it's probably best suited for senior surgical residents and practicing general surgeons who don't already routinely care for trauma victims. For these groups of readers, this book is an excellent choice - it's an easy and quite educational read. Other groups of readers (such as Emergency Department personnel and ICU personnel) may wish to look elsewhere for their learning.
K**N
Great book. One minor but glaring error...
Great information and a great read. I like the writing style , sort of how a smarter colleague might instruct you. The authors have the thoracic inlet mixed up with the thoracic outlet and it made tough for me to figure out what the heck they were talking about until I figured they got it backwards. Please, please fix it on the next edition. The thoracic inlet is the little hole at the top of the chest and the thoracic outlet is the big hole at the bottom of the chest
N**A
Livro excelente
Bem escrito e ilustrado. Com linguagem prática e direta, pequeno e facil de transportar na bolsa para ler no dia a dia. Livro muito muito bom. Veio bem embalado e sem danos
V**A
Excelente obra
Un texto ameno, con excelentes ilustraciones, y de fácil lectura. Extraordinario material para médicos-cirujanos, y especialmente si deben trabajar en hospitales o centros con medios limitados o aislados y afrontar situaciones críticas. .
I**E
Good for board exams
Good book help me to pass my board exams Good humor in the book Good suggestions to help you in case of real trauma
S**A
Fantastic book
This great book worth to buy always! Great quality. I will hold in 10-20years
I**S
To the point..
An absolute classic of surgical texts which is to-the-point, engaging, often funny, and highly useful and practical. This is not a textbook of trauma,it is just straight up wisdom and experience for when you find yourself deep in trouble with a trauma patient
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