See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/311718326 Anesthetic Pharmacology Basic Principles and Clinical Practice Article in BJA British Journal of Anaesthesia · November 2011 DOI: 10.1093/bja/aer307 CITATION READS 1 8,802 2 authors: Marc Chikhani Jonathan G Hardman University of Nottingham University of Nottingham 69 PUBLICATIONS 1,325 CITATIONS 260 PUBLICATIONS 3,931 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Jonathan G Hardman on 08 February 2017. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. SEE PROFILE BJA Book Reviews monitoring, and the anaesthetic machine. (iii) Applied physiology and pharmacology: anaesthesia related to the cardiovascular system, lung, and other systems. Then a brief applied pharmacology section. (iv) Clinical cases: these give examples of anaesthetic practice in conscious sedation, monitored care, Caesarean section under regional block, nerve blocks, trauma, liver resection, abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, paediatric hernia, spinal surgery, and gastric bypass. There is only the briefest mention of the need for postoperative care in the high dependency unit or intensive care unit, which I think is an omission, given its importance in more major or emergency cases. This book provides a very good introduction to the subject for medical students, those contemplating an anaesthetic career, and anaesthetic assistants. It would also be a good read for surgical trainees to gain understanding of some of the basic principles of anaesthetic practice. In my opinion, it could be an ideal book for anaesthetic departments to have on a loan system for rotational students. I would suggest the title is changed to reflect the target audience for this good book. A. R. Bodenham Leeds, UK E-mail: andy.bodenham@leedsth.nhs.uk doi:10.1093/bja/aer306 Anesthetic Pharmacology Basic Principles and Clinical Practice, 2nd Edn, A. Evers, M. Maze and E. Kharasch (editors). Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. Pp. 1194; indexed; illustrated. Price £120.00 (US$ 195.00). ISBN 978-0-521-89666-5. The second edition of this comprehensive text comprises 71 chapters and an index. Individual chapters are written by contributors from a variety of backgrounds, including anaesthesia and intensive care medicine, with the majority of authors holding academic positions in the USA. The chapters are distributed between four sections: principles of drug action, physiologic substrates of drug action, essential drugs in anaesthetic practice, and clinical applications: evidence-based anaesthesia practice. Each chapter is around 10 –20 pages in length supported by 20–300 references. The text is clearly presented in two columns per page. Diagrams are used liberally (approximately every other page) either as an illustrated figure or as an information table. The paper is of good quality for an illustrated book of this size. The book is easy and enjoyable to read. Chapters are remarkably consistent despite the number of contributors, achieved by uniform use of headings and subheading hierarchy. Language is clear and explanations of concepts are comprehensive. There are 18 additional chapters in this book compared with the first edition. The contents are comprehensive and these reviewers found no omission compared with other pharmacology texts. Despite being titled as a pharmacology text, there is significant coverage of the pathophysiology and practice of anaesthesia. The content is current, with several new drug compounds and theories of action described. This book complements the filtered down information found in many of the smaller texts recommended to trainees sitting exams and by increasing understanding of the subjects might aid long-term learning. The final section of the book deals with the application of pharmacology in anaesthetic practice. It also provides, where necessary, good descriptions of several important clinical pharmacology trials to allow readers to broaden their knowledge of the evidence base. Overall, this is an excellent book. It provides an enormous amount of information to the reader in a clear and understandable format. As a reference text, it would be a good addition to the library of an anaesthesia or intensive care department. M. Chikhani and J. G. Hardman Nottingham, UK E-mail: j.hardman@nottingham.ac.uk doi:10.1093/bja/aer307 825 View publication stats