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Low-Cost Veterinary Clinical Diagnostics
ENGLAR-DIAL
Low-Cost Veterinary Clinical Diagnostics
1° ed., 338 pagg., 80 ill., John Wiley & Sons, luglio 2025
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€ 94
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€ 80
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In Low-Cost Veterinary Clinical Diagnostics, the authors provide a hands-on resource designed to facilitate healthcare delivery across the spectrum of care.
Historically, clinicians have been taught to apply the gold standard approach to the practice of medicine. However, recent advances in veterinary medical care and associated technologies have made practitioners question whether a one-size-fits-all approach is truly best. After all, when we perform diagnostic tests, are we testing out of the desire for completeness, to cover all bases for the good of the patient? Or are we testing because we are expected to?
The reality is that gold standard care is not always advisable and not always possible. In clinical practice, veterinarians frequently encounter obstacles that limit their approaches to case management. Cost of care is a significant constraint that requires practitioners to rethink which diagnostic tests are essential.
Not every patient requires a complete blood count (CBC), chemistry profile, urinalysis, and fecal analysis to obtain diagnostic value. This text suggests that the “best” approach to case management be determined by the situation, the context, the patient, and the client.
While sophisticated panels of tests may remain the recommended approach to case management, Low-Cost Veterinary Clinical Diagnostics outlines entry-level, in-house diagnostic blood, urine, fecal, and body cavity fluid tests: how to perform them as well as the breadth and depth of patient-specific data that can be gleaned from quick assessment tests (QATs).
Readers will also find:
  • A thorough introduction to patient care considerations, communication strategies that facilitate cost-conscious shared decision-making
  • Comprehensive explorations of quick assessment tests (QATs) in hematology, including packed cell volume (PCV), total solids (TS), buffy coat analysis, blood smears, blood glucose, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), saline agglutination tests, and activated clotting time.
  • Practical discussions of quick assessment tests (QATs) involving urine, including urine color, dipstick analysis, specific gravity (USG), and urine sediment analysis
  • Pragmatic evaluation of fecal analysis, including considerations surrounding fecal color, volume, consistency, and odor; saline smears or wet mounts, and fecal flotation.
  • Discussion on body cavity fluid analysis
  • Sample case vignettes, complete with question and answer (Q&A)
Perfect for veterinary practitioners, veterinary technicians, veterinary and veterinary technician students, Low-Cost Veterinary Clinical Diagnostics offers a quick and easy reference guide to maximizing diagnostic value in those cases where care is cost-prohibitive.

Part 1 – Patient Care Considerations and Client Communication Strategies
 
Chapter 1: The Gold Standard, Standards of Care, and Spectrum of Care: An Evolving Approach to Diagnostic Medicine  Ryane E. Englar
1.1         Defining the Gold Standard
1.2         Limitations of the Gold Standard
1.3         Returning to the Case of the Cat with Stranguria: A Different Perspective on Standards of Care
1.4         Limitations to Standards of Care
1.5         Spectrum of Care
 
Chapter 2: Communication Strategies that Facilitate Dialogue on the Diagnostic Approach to Patient Care Ryane E. Englar
2.1         The Emergence of Communication as a Clinically Relevant Skill in Human Healthcare
2.2         The Evolution of Communication in Veterinary Health Care
2.3         Communication Skills that are Essential to Diagnosis-Making
2.4         The Concepts of Health Literacy and Compliance
2.5         Using Easy-to-Understand (Nonmedical) Language
2.6         Checking in
2.7         Assessing the Client’s Knowledge
2.8         Signposting
2.9         Addressing Cost of Care
 
Part 2 – Quick Assessment Tests (QATS) in Hematology
 
Chapter 3: Packed Cell Volume (PCV)  Sharon Dial
Chapter 4: Total Protein (TP) as Measured by Refractometry Sharon Dial
Chapter 5: Gross and Microscopic Evaluation of the Buffy Coat Sharon Dial
Chapter 6: The Blood Film  Sharon Dial
Chapter 7: Blood Glucose (BG) Sharon Dial
Chapter 8: Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN)  Sharon Dial
Chapter 9: Whole Blood Lactate  Sharon Dial
Chapter 10: Saline Agglutination Test  Sharon Dial
Chapter 11: Activated Clotting Time (ACT)  Sharon Dial
 
Part 3 – Quick Assessment Tests (QATS) involving Urine
Chapter 12: Assessing Urine’s Physical Properties  Ryane E. Englar
Chapter 13: Urine Specific Gravity (USG)  Ryane E. Englar
Chapter 14: Chemical Evaluation of Urine: Urine Dipstick Analysis Ryane E. Englar
Chapter 15: Urine Sediment Examination  Sharon Dial
 
Part 4 – Quick Assessment Tests (QATS) involving Feces
Chapter 16: Assessing the Physical Properties of Fecal Matter  Ryane E. Englar
Chapter 17: Saline Smear  Ryane E. Englar
Chapter 18: Fecal Flotation   Ryane E. Englar and Jeremy Bessett
 
Part 5 – Quick Assessment of Body Cavity Fluids
Chapter 19: Body Cavity Fluid Analysis  Sharon Dial
 
Part 6 – Clinical Cases
Jeremy Bessett, with oversight by Sharon Dial
 
Case 1: Fred
Case 2: Bella
Case 3: Benji
Case 4: Mittens
Case 5: Star
Case 6: Earl
Case 7: Sammy
Case 8: Coffee
Case 9: Dexter
Case 10: Tabitha
Case 11: Ace
Case 12: Timothy
Case 13: Duckie
Case 14: Angel
Case 15: Chase
 
Index 

Ryane E. Englar, DVM, DABVP (Canine and Feline Practice) is Executive Director of Clinical and Professional Skills and Associate Professor at the University of Arizona College of Veterinary Medicine in Oro Valley, Arizona, USA.
 
Sharon Dial, DVM, Ph.D., DACVP (Clinical and Anatomic Pathology) is Research Scientist at the University of Arizona College of Veterinary Medicine in Oro Valley, Arizona, USA.

Codice Articolo: MEDIN257
ISBN: 9781119714507
Peso: 1500 g
Area: Cane/Gatto
Disciplina: Medicina di laboratorio
IVA: Esente IVA