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Book Review
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Volume 334:999 April 11, 1996 Number 15
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Blood: Hemostasis, transfusion, and alternatives in the perioperative period

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Edited by Carol L. Lake and Roger A. Moore. 554 pp., illustrated. Philadelphia, Lippincott–Raven, 1995. $129. ISBN 0-7817-0287-4.

Throughout the world, a large proportion of all transfused blood is given to patients undergoing surgery. Responsibility for decisions about transfusion therapy during surgery frequently falls to the person in charge of the patient's anesthesia and life support. Thus, it is appropriate that a textbook on transfusion therapy focus on the perioperative period from the perspective of the anesthesiologist. Indeed, 37 of the 44 contributing authors are anesthesiologists who practice and teach in leading programs around the United States. The book's 27 chapters, organized into five sections, cover hemostatic mechanisms, the clinical evaluation of patients with suspected coagulopathies, and transfusion . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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