Anatomy
Sylvius MR: Atlas of the Human Brain is a customizable neuroanatomy learning and reference tool that highlights sagittal, coronal and axial T1-weighted magnetic resonance images. It contains over 2,493 structure annotations and audio pronunciations.
Clemente’s Anatomy Flash Cards feature 300+ full-color annotated images to enhance your human anatomy knowledge. Create your own pinpoints and labels. Structures provide additional crucial information about bones, muscles, nerves, arteries, veins, ligaments, topographic features, lymphatics, and organs.
The modalityBODY App for iPad enables you to create interactive image libraries of the human body for professional reference, training, and patient education. Compile images from renowned medical texts or from your own photos to create custom collections.
Anatomy on the Go features more than 350 images found in Thieme's complete Atlas of Anatomy. Ideal for students, this collection also offers comments and clinical applications where appropriate, to help apply information for real-life practice.
Get Thieme's bestselling Atlas of Anatomy, featuring full-color illustrations by Markus Voll and Karl Wesker, based on the work of Michael Schuenke, Erik Schulte, and Udo Schumacher and edited by Anne M. Gilroy, Brian R. MacPherson, and Lawrence M. Ross.
More than 300 regionally organized, full-color flash cards have been transformed into a truly customizable, interactive, mobile learning experience.
Fitzpatrick's Clinical Dermatology Image Collection combines text, clinical reference points, and high-quality photographs of skin disorders to deliver the full range of dermatological conditions.
The Imaging Atlas of Human Anatomy, 4th edition, presents a healthy human body as seen via the full range of modern imaging techniques. Content includes images showing cross-sectional views in CT and MRI, nuclear medicine imaging, and more.
Thieme is excited to offer this free sampling of anatomy illustrations and clinical content from the bestselling Atlas of Anatomy.
This Sampler is based on the print atlas, the Imaging Atlas of Human Anatomy, 4th Edition, offering a complete view of the structures and relationships within the body through a variety of imaging modalities.
These full-color flash cards feature clinically relevant descriptions of structures, concise versions of the text's clinical/"Blue Boxes", and correlating images found in Moore and Dalley's Clinically Oriented Anatomy, Fifth Edition and Agur and Dalley's Grant's Atlas of Anatomy, Eleventh Edition, by Douglas J Gould, PhD.
These bestselling flash cards contain full-color illustrations from Netter's Atlas of Human Anatomy, 5th Edition, paired with concise text identifying structures, reviewing anatomical information and clinical correlations.
Match modern diagnostic images with a subset of the anatomic drawings from the Atlas of Human Anatomy, by Dr. Frank Netter, and enable a comfortable familiarity with how human anatomy is typically viewed in clinical practice.
These flash cards highlight salient microscopic features of cells, tissues, and organs of the body to reinforce knowledge of clinical relevance of histological structure and function, using the same anatomical illustrations from Netter's Atlas of Human Anatomy.
Test and enhance your knowledge of bones, muscles, ligaments, tendons and joints with outstanding illustrations created by, and in the style of, master medical illustrator Frank H. Netter, MD. Anatomical illustrations are supplemented with clinical, radiographic, and arthroscopic images depicting the most common musculoskeletal pathologies.
The only gross anatomy flash card set that includes full-color photographs of actual cadaver dissections, this volume realistically depicts anatomic structures as seen on the cadaver, allowing students to prepare for lab dissections and study for practical laboratory exams.
Sylvius MR is a customizable neuroanatomy learning and reference tool utilizing images and annotations from Sylvius, the benchmark application for exploring and understanding the anatomy of the human central nervous system. 31 axial, 40 coronal, and 17 sagittal T1-weighted magnetic resonance images contain over 2493 structure annotations, with concise text describing brain structures and their functional significance.
