The tenth edition is an
important milestone in
the life of a textbook.
This occasion is a
propitious time to look
back on the origins of
Basic Pathology, which
are summed up best by
quoting Stanley Robbins
from the preface of the
first edition (1971):
\"Of books as well as
men, it may be
observed that fat ones
contain thin ones
struggling to get out. In
a sense, this book
bears such a relationship
to its more substantial
progenitor, Robbins
Pathology. It arose from
an appreciation of the
modem medical
student's dilemma. As
the curriculum has
become restructured to
place greater emphasis
on clinical experience,
time for reading is
correspondingly
curtailed...In writing this
book, rare and esoteric
lesions are omitted
without apology, and
infrequent or trivial ones
described only briefly.
We felt it important,
however, to consider
rather fully the major
disease entities.\"
While the goals of
\"baby Robbins\" remain
true to the vision of
Stanley Robbins, this
edition has been revised
on the basis of a few
additional principles.
目录
Introduction to Modern Pathology
CHAPTER 1 Cell Injury, Cell Death, and Adaptations
CHAPTER 2 Tissue Repair
CHAPTER 3 Hemodynamic Disorders
CHAPTER 4 Inflammation
CHAPTER 5 Diseases of the Immune System
CHAPTER 6 Neoplasia
CHAPTER 7 Genetic and Pediatric Diseases
CHAPTER 8 Environmental and Nutritional Diseases
CHAPTER 9 Cardiovascular System
CHAPTER 10 Lung
CHAPTER 11 Oral Cavities and Gastrointestinal Tract
CHAPTER 12 Liver and Gallbladder, Biliary Tract, and Pancreas
CHAPTER 13 Hematopoietic and Lymphoid Systems
CHAPTER 14 Kidney and Its Collecting System
CHAPTER 15 Male Genital System
CHAPTER 16 Female Genital System and Breast
CHAPTER 17 Endocrine System
CHAPTER 18 Bones, Joints, and Soft Tissue Tumors
CHAPTER 19 Peripheral Nerves and Muscles
CHAPTER 20 Central Nervous System
CHAPTER 21 Infectious Diseases
CHAPTER 22 Parasitosis