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Volumes 2 and 3 of the Atlas of Heart Diseases are well-documented and superbly illustrated textbooks. Each volume appropriately fulfills the role of atlas with outstanding illustrative material, and the subsections reflect a broad degree of diverse clinical experience. Each entity in the Atlas is thoroughly described in terms of clinical data, pathophysiology, diagnostic imaging, differential diagnoses, and treatments.
Volume 2, which focuses on the cardiomyopathies, myocarditis, and pericardial diseases, is not intended to be comprehensive. It more than adequately fulfills its purpose in presenting the most common forms of cardiomyopathy, as well as typical illustrative forms. In addition to
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