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CLINICAL RADIOLOGY
BOOK REVIEWS Oinical Radiology of the Paediatric Abdomen and GastroIntestinal Tract. By R. L. Shapiro. Medical and Technical Publishing Co. Ltd, 1976, 459 pages, 650 illustrations. Price £28.25. This b o o k is constructed as an atlas o f radiographic appearances which the author has planned to interest general radiologists both in practice and in training, and also paediatricians and paediatric surgeons. Each section c o m m e n c e s with, a s u m m a r y of the principal clinical manifestations, the relevant radiological examinations, and the cardinal radiological signs; as, for example, in t h e first, section, which deals with oesophaegeal atresia and trachea-oesophageal fistula. As an atlas, this b o o k has a high standard of illustration and contains good examples o f a wide variety of conditions encountered in the 'paediatric a b d o m e n ' . The annotations to the illustrations are concise, descriptive and accurate. The division o f the book into sections on pathological entities makes each section easy to identify, b u t brings with it the problems of conditions which need to be m e n t i o n e d and illustrated in various sections, to produce a proper level of differential diagnosis. In some instances when this has been done, for example, in the section on corrosive gastritis, the reader finds a sudden transition from illustrations of this condition to frilling defects due to l y m p h o - s a r c o m a without any clear indication w h y the latter condition fits into this particular part o f the book_ In some cases, conditions that have proved to be an i m p o r t a n t differential diagnosis in the reader's experience are n o t m e n t i o n e d ; thus, the illustrations of intramural duodenal h a e m a t o m a could also be due to a post-traumatic pancreatitis with t r a u m a as a precipitating factor in b o t h conditions. The author also perpetuates the theory that the f o a m y appearance of m e c o n i u m is due to the presence of air bubbles, whereas it is difficult to reconcile this with the actual appearance o f m e c o n i u m ; the small lucent areas are, in fact, due to fat globules. There is a tendency to over-simplify the problems o f interpretation o f the inverted lateral film in ano-rectal atresia. No m e n t i o n is m a d e o f the work of Cremin in defining the so-called M4ine as a useful indication as to the level of a lesion. The other imp o r t a n t omission in this section is to c o m m e n t on the variability of the position o f the gas-filled rectal p o u c h in relation to skeletal levels so well d e m o n s t r a t e d by Berdon and Baker some 10 years ago.
The references are adequate, b u t tend to ignore work carried on outside t h e United States and certain key references such as Hans Helmet's m o n o g r a p h on intussusception However, in general, t h e subject m a t t e r is well balanced, the a u t h o r does n o t over-stress the use of radiology, for example, the diagnosis of pyloric stenosis, where the classical clinical findings do n o t require radiological confirmation. He avoids the pitfalls s o m e t i m e s associated with a technical dissertation on the rotation o f the gut during foetal life and prefers to concentrate on t h e radiological findings of realrotation and non-rotation in t h e infant! The main strength o f this book is in the excellent illustrations and as such it should find a place in the X-ray departments of children's hospitals and should be available to trainee radiologists w h e n they are passing through a period of a t t a c h m e n t to a children's X-ray department. R. K. Levick
Californium,252 in Teaching and Research. By E. J. Hall and H H Rossi. IAEA Publication. This tidy little volume admirably fills its avowed purpose of leading n e w potential users of californium-252 as a n e u t r o n source for teaching or experiments into the safe handling o f this material. The introduction of radiations and their interactions is precise and readable. The dosimetric m e t h o d s are to be c o m m e n d e d , and as they have already been widely used by m a n y authors for n e u t r o n beam dosimerry, ensure that new users are likely to be able to measure n e u t r o n doses from californium-252 with reasonable accuracy. The large sections on biological effects are apparently condensed from Professor Hall's excellent book Radiobiology for the Radiologist and the laboratory m a n u a l leads the new user very firmly by the h a n d through a full range of simple and not so simple radiobiological experiments_ This is a worthwhile source book for any radiotherapy d e p a r t m e n t contemplating the use of californium-252 source for brachytherapy, although it is n o t specifically written for that market, It certainly has the virtue o f being inexpensive and has a wealth of practical suggestions for the storing and handling of this material which will save the new user a lot of headscratching in the first instance R_ J. Berry