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ESC Textbook of Preventive Cardiology and the ESC Handbook of Preventive Cardiology [Multiple-component retail product]

Edited by (Deputy Director and Head of Department, University Clinic & Clinic for Internal Medicine III, Halle (Saale), Germany), Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (Professor of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of Ghent, Belgium), Edited by (Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, N)
  • Formatas: Multiple-component retail product, 616 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 283x227x31 mm, weight: 1512 g
  • Serija: The European Society of Cardiology Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Oct-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198795041
  • ISBN-13: 9780198795049
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Multiple-component retail product, 616 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 283x227x31 mm, weight: 1512 g
  • Serija: The European Society of Cardiology Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Oct-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198795041
  • ISBN-13: 9780198795049
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Combining an accessible and practical how-to manual with a comprehensive textbook, together with full online access to both resources, this pack provides medical professionals with a great value resource covering all aspects of preventive cardiology.This pack comes with full online access to both resources on Oxford Medicine Online, for as long as the books are published by Oxford University Press. By activating your unique access codes, you can read and annotate the full text online, follow links from the references to primary research materials, and view, enlarge, and download all the figures and tables.

This pack is an essential collection in understanding and delivering effective strategies for preventing cardiovascular disease. It combines The ESC Textbook of Preventive Cardiology, which is the official textbook of the EACPR and a state-of-the art reference work, with The ESC Handbook of Preventive Cardiology, an easy-to-use and portable quick guide to preventive care in practice.

The ESC Textbook of Preventive Cardiology is comprehensive, and extensively linked to practice guidelines and recommendations from the European Association of Cardiac Prevention and Rehabilitation (EACPR), clearing connecting the latest evidence-base to strategies and proposals for implementing those findings in clinical practice.

The textbook ranges from epidemiology and risk stratification through psychological factors, behaviour and motivation to secondary prevention, integrating hospital-based and community care for cardiovascular disease prevention with information on cardio-protective drugs. Case studies, clinical decision-making trees and drug tables with recommended doses and potential side-effects make it easier than ever to implement treatments in practice.

IThe ESC Handbook of Preventive Cardiology is a 'how-to' manual for busy healthcare professionals. Complementing the 2012 Joint European Guidelines on cardiovascular disease prevention and in line with recommendations from the European Association of Cardiac Prevention and Rehabilitation, it is an invaluable source of tools and skills to assist with the delivery of effective cardiovascular disease prevention.

The handbook focuses on practical strategies that can be used in clinical settings. Concise and easily accessible, it guides readers through the patient and family pathway - from patient identification, recruitment of the patient and family, assessing lifestyle and risk factors, to managing lifestyle change, reducing risk factors, and compliance with cardio-protective drug therapies. Information on how to deliver a health promotion workshop programme and run a supervised exercise programme is also included.

Previously published as Preventive Cardiology: A practical manual and now fully revised and updated and packed with checklists and diagrams, such as risk estimation charts, The ESC Handbook of Preventive Cardiology helps health workers contribute in real and practical ways to the prevention of artherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
Abbreviations xi
Contributors xiii
Part 1 What is prevention and why do we need it?
1 Why do we need cardiovascular disease prevention?
3(2)
2 What is a high-risk patient?
5(4)
3 How to assess risk
9(8)
4 Biomarkers in risk assessment
17(4)
5 Imaging in risk assessment
21(6)
6 Erectile dysfunction and cardiovascular risk
27(4)
7 Priorities and targets
31(4)
Part 2 Practical aspects of prevention
8 Behavioural strategies to support and sustain lifestyle change
35(8)
9 Engaging people in prevention initiatives
43(2)
10 Treatment of tobacco dependence
45(10)
11 Diet and weight: major lifestyle challenges
55(42)
12 Helping people to become more physically active
97(16)
13 Managing blood pressure
113(16)
14 Managing blood lipids
129(10)
15 Managing blood glucose
139(10)
16 Drug therapies to reduce risk: evidence and practicalities
149(8)
17 Identifying and managing psychosocial factors
157(10)
18 Putting educational strategies into practice
167(16)
Part 3 Setting up preventive cardiology initiatives
19 The global care pathway and how it works in practice
183(4)
20 Examples of initiatives in different care settings: starting preventive and rehabilitative care in hospital
187(8)
21 Examples of initiatives in different care settings: community
195(8)
22 Ensuring quality of interventions
203(16)
Index 219(124)
Abbreviations x
Contributors xiii
PART 1 Epidemiology of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease
1 Epidemiology of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease: scope of the problem and its determinants
3(18)
Martin O'Flaherty
Susanna Sans-Menendez
Simon Capewell
Torben Jørgensen
PART 2 Aetiology and pathophysiology of atherosclerosis
2 Genetic background of atherosclerosis and its risk factors
21(5)
Lesca M. Holdt
Daniel Teupser
3 From risk factors to plaque development and plaque destabilization
26(4)
Ulf Landmesser
Wolfgang Koenig
4 The role of thrombosis
30(9)
Elena M. Faioni
Maddalena Lettino
Marco Cattaneo
PART 3 Components of preventive cardiology
5 Risk stratification and risk assessment
39(15)
Ian Graham
Marie Therese Cooney
Dirk De Bacquer
6 Imaging in cardiovascular prevention
54(23)
Uwe Nixdorff
Stephan Achenbach
Frank Bengel
Pompilio Faggiano
Sara Fernandez
Christian Heiss
Thomas Mengden
Gian Francesco Mureddu
Eike Nagel
Valentina Puntmann
Jose Zamorano
7 Primary prevention: principles and practice
77(13)
Diego Vanuzzo
Simona Giampaoli
8 Secondary prevention and cardiac rehabilitation: principles and practice
90(15)
Massimo F. Piepoli
Pantaleo Giannuzzi
9 Behaviour and motivation
105(7)
Christian Albus
Christoph Herrmann-Lingen
10 Smoking
112(13)
Charlotta Pisinger
Serena Tonstad
11 Nutrition
125(15)
Jean Dallongeville
Deborah Lycett
Monique Verschuren
12 Physical activity and inactivity
140(35)
Stephan Gielen
Alessandro Mezzani
Paola Pontremoli
Simone Binno
Giovanni Q. Villani
Massimo F. Piepoli
Josef Niebauer
Daniel Forman
13 Overweight, obesity, and abdominal adiposity
175(14)
Gabriele Riccardi
Maria Masulli
14 Blood pressure
189(12)
Robert Fagard
Giuseppe Mancia
Renata Cifkova
15 Lipids
201(13)
Zeljko Reiner
Olov Wiklund
John Betteridge
16 Glucose intolerance and diabetes
214(14)
Christina Jarnert
Linda Mellbin
Lars Ryden
Jaakko Tuomilehto
17 Coagulation and thrombosis
228(10)
Kurt Huber
Joao Morais
18 Psychosocial factors in the prevention of cardiovascular disease
238(13)
Tores Theorell
Chantal Brisson
Michel Vezina
Alain Milot
Mahee Gilbert-Ouimet
19 Cardioprotective drugs
251(22)
Johan De Sutter
Miguel Mendes
Oscar H. Franco
PART 4 Setting and delivery of preventive cardiology
20 General remarks
273(5)
Pantaleo Giannuzzi
21 Acute care, immediate secondary prevention, and referral
278(7)
Ugo Corra
Bernhard Rauch
22 Hospital-based rehabilitation units
285(9)
Heinz Voller
Rona Reibis
Bernhard Schwaab
Jean-Paul Schmid
23 Ambulatory preventive care: outpatient clinics and primary care
294(9)
Jean-Paul Schmid
Hugo Saner
24 Health promotion to improve cardiovascular health in the general population
303(9)
Emer Shelley
Margaret E. Cupples
25 Community-based prevention centres
312(11)
Susan Connolly
Margaret E. Cupples
PART 5 Evaluation of preventive cardiology
26 Evaluation of preventive cardiology
323(20)
Kornelia Kotseva
Neil Oldridge
Massimo F. Piepoli
Index 343
Stephan Gielen is the Deputy Director & Head of Department of the University Clinic & Clinic for Internal Medicine III in Halle (Saale), Germany. He was President of the European Association of Preventive Cardiology (EAPC) from 2012-2014, and is Speaker of the Working Group of Preventive Cardiology of the German Society of Cardiology, and Vice Speaker of the Working Group on Cardiac Diseases in the Elderly. After his medical education at the University of Bochum, Germany, Harvard Medical School, Boston, and Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, USA, he started his internship at Heidelberg University before moving to Leipzig in 1997.



Guy De Backer graduated as medical doctor at Ghent University in 1968. He holds a special degree in cardiology and in cardiac rehabilitation and he was awarded with an additional degree in public health. From 1973 until 1988 he was a permanent research fellow at the National Fund for Scientific Research (Belgium). In 1979 he was awarded with a PhD in epidemiology at Ghent University. From 1988 onwards he was professor of medicine at Ghent University chairing the Department of Public Health from 1989-2009 and the Cardiac Rehabilitation center of the University Hospital from 1983-2009. He is the author or co-author of more than 405 publications in journals cited in SCI, SSCI or AHCI, 120 papers in other journals and more than 40 chapters in books.



Guy De Backer is a member and the past-chairman of the Superior Health Council in Belgium (1996-2009) and a member and the past-president of the Royal Academy of Medicine of Belgium (2007-2010).



Professor Massimo F Piepoli is a Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer at Imperial College.



David Wood is the Garfield Weston Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine at the International Centre for Circulatory Health, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, and Honorary Consultant Cardiologist to Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. With a special interest in prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), Professor Wood has developed Guidelines on CVD prevention for the World Health Organisation, European Society of Cardiology and the British Cardiovascular Society. He has contributed to policy development through the European Heart Health Initiative, leading to the St Valentines Day declaration on CVD Prevention, and subsequently the European Heart Health Charter, which aims to reduce the burden of cardiovascular disease through political advocacy.



Catriona Jennings is a cardiac specialist nurse and the European Research Nurse coordinator for EUROACTION and EUROASPIRE III in the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine at the National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London.





Ian Graham qualified in medicine at Trinity College, Dublin. He trained in the Adelaide and St. Vincent's Hospitals in Dublin, and at Papworth Hospital in Cambridge, England. He held the post of MRC Research Fellow and, later, Director of Research at St. Vincent's Hospital and was also Director of Research at the Irish Heart Foundation. He is past president of the Irish Heart Foundation, the Irish Hyperlipidaemia Association, and of the Dublin University Biological Association. He also founded the Irish Cardiac Surgery Register. Awards and distinctions have included a Medical Research Council Fellowship, an ISFC Cardiovascular Epidemiology Fellowship, the first Stokes Lectureship in Dublin and an EU Travelling Fellowship at Erasmus University in Rotterdam, and Fellowships of the European Society of Cardiology and of the American College of Chest Physicians. He is an honorary Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.