Intestinal transplantation is probably the most esoteric area of organ transplantation, so learning anything about it can be nearly impossible. The occasional article or meeting isn't nearly enough to get an overall picture of the field, so I was glad to find a book about it called Intestinal Failure: Diagnosis, Management and Transplantation.
For transplantation, this book has it all. Surgery, immunosuppression, rejection, infections, evaluation...all the usual topics in organ transplantation are included. In particular, it discusses the different transplant options--isolated intestinal transplant, liver-intestine transplant, and multivisceral transplant--and describes the differences and indications for each. Piecing this information together from individual articles isn't nearly as useful, since most of them report on one particular procedure at one center with the conclusion of "look how well it worked!" There could be more detail on some general aspects of transplantation, such as immunology, but there are many other sources for that information, so this book stays focused on its niche and gives plenty of information to understand its topic.
Even though most people reading about intestinal transplantation have an extensive background (either professionally or personally), the book begins with general information about the gastrointestinal system and intestinal failure, which is great. If I had to name a weakness, it would be the information on parenteral nutrition, which is pretty limited given how important it is in intestinal failure, and doesn't provide nearly enough detail to understand a PN prescription. Of course, prescribing PN is a specialty in itself for physicians and for dietitians, so it's understandable if it can't be covered here. Intestinal and multivisceral transplantation is only an interest for me, not something I deal with personally or professionally, so it's great to find a book that explains it well.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Book Review: Intestinal Failure: Diagnosis, Management, and Transplantation
Posted by Manu Varma at 12:47 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment