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For a rare disease such as pheochromocytoma, general physicians will find most of the information they need in the regularly updated editions of standard general textbooks of medicine. It may be thought that with instant access to specialist literature in the journals, experts have little need for books such as this one. I doubt, however, whether I am the only pheochromocytoma specialist to admit an addiction to the first edition of Clinical and Experimental Pheochromocytoma, and I can assure my colleagues that this second edition is a worthy successor. Only in the unique set of case histories from the authors'
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