Wendy Ware is Professor Emerita of the Veterinary Clinical Sciences and Biomedical Sciences departments at Iowa State University, where she has taught clinical cardiology and cardiovascular physiology to thousands of veterinary students. She served as Staff Cardiologist at the ISU Lloyd Veterinary Medical Center for many years and was the first faculty member to hold the Phyllis M. Clark Professorship in Cardiology. Dr. Ware is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (specialty of Cardiology) and former President of the ACVIM Board of Regents. John Bonagura is Professor Emeritus of Veterinary Clinical Sciences at the Ohio State University and currently practices and teaches cardiology at North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine. John is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine, specialties of Cardiology and Internal Medicine, and former President of the specialty of Cardiology.
A very fine addition to the first edition of Dr. Ware's textbook, Cardiovascular Disease in Small Animal Medicine. Over a lengthy period of time, Dr. Ware has significantly revised and added to her original textbook on Cardiovascular Diseases. This edition has been supplemented with a significant amount of new material including diseases in the horse with the assistance of Dr. J. Bonagura as well as producing a text that will be utilized across the spectrum in veterinary medicine. Dr. Brian Scansen has similarly added to the book's usefulness by providing additional excellent illustrative material that fits in very well with the scope of the book. With the additional discussion and explanation, this book will be of use not only to the student, the practicing veterinarian but also to medicine residents and cardiologists who wish to have a detailed understanding of the subject. The table of contents alone shows the breadth of this undertaking. It is hard to look at it without immediately being drawn to any one of the new or expanded chapters. Over the last decade there has not been a significant addition to the cardiovascular literature in the form of a complete book dedicated to this one subject. I am pleased to recommend this book as the latest and most complete tome available to our profession. I believe anyone with even a passing interest in this field will be pleased to have this book as part of their library. It is complete, thorough and very well written along with supportive, clear to understand and extensive illustrations including most importantly current echocardiograms that clearly demonstrate the pathological processes being discussed. Stephen Ettinger, DVM, DACVIM (SAIM and Cardiology) This excellent textbook is a must have for all veterinary practitioners, interns, residents and veterinary students. It is complete - you do not need any other cardiovascular book! It is broken down into 5 sections with an added formulary at the end. New to the book (from the previous edition) are thorough sections on equine cardiovascular disease, diagnosis and treatment and updates on all of the other sections. The book is extremely thorough covering the normal heart (including P-V loops), cardiac imaging (including tons of high quality images and equine thoracic radiographs), echocardiography (including color Doppler and 3D echo), ECG, cardiac catheterization and angiography, and that is just section 1. Section 2 discusses clinical manifestation and is broken up into the common symptoms - syncope, cough, respiratory distress, etc. This is very helpful, particularly for students and interns or for advanced practitioners working emergency shifts. Section 3 is all about heart failure including treatment options and drug dosages. Section 4 covers all things dysrhythmia with numerous images of dysrhythmias. Section 5 covers all congenital diseases, degenerative, infective, pericardial, thromboembolic, systemic hypertension, pulmonary hypertension and heart worm. This section also has a chapter for each species (dog, cat, horse) on myocardial diseases. The section on thromboembolic disease has up to the minute information on traditional as well as new anticoagulants such as rivaroxaban and dabigatran with a thorough explanation of the current model of coagulation as well as how each of the anticoagulants work. This textbook is one that practitioners will go to frequently for up to date information on a plethora of cardiovascular disease concepts. I look forward to using this book frequently for teaching and clinical cases. Maureen McMichael, DVM, M.Ed., DACVECC, Professor of Emergency and Critical Care at Auburn University A very fine addition to the first edition of Dr. Ware's textbook, Cardiovascular Disease in Small Animal Medicine. Over a lengthy period of time, Dr. Ware has significantly revised and added to her original textbook on Cardiovascular Diseases. This edition has been supplemented with a significant amount of new material including diseases in the horse with the assistance of Dr. J. Bonagura as well as producing a text that will be utilized across the spectrum in veterinary medicine. Dr. Brian Scansen has similarly added to the book's usefulness by providing additional excellent illustrative material that fits in very well with the scope of the book. With the additional discussion and explanation, this book will be of use not only to the student, the practicing veterinarian but also to medicine residents and cardiologists who wish to have a detailed understanding of the subject. The table of contents alone shows the breadth of this undertaking. It is hard to look at it without immediately being drawn to any one of the new or expanded chapters. Over the last decade there has not been a significant addition to the cardiovascular literature in the form of a complete book dedicated to this one subject. I am pleased to recommend this book as the latest and most complete tome available to our profession. I believe anyone with even a passing interest in this field will be pleased to have this book as part of their library. It is complete, thorough and very well written along with supportive, clear to understand and extensive illustrations including most importantly current echocardiograms that clearly demonstrate the pathological processes being discussed. Stephen Ettinger, DVM, DACVIM (SAIM and Cardiology) This excellent textbook is a must have for all veterinary practitioners, interns, residents and veterinary students. It is complete - you do not need any other cardiovascular book! It is broken down into 5 sections with an added formulary at the end. New to the book (from the previous edition) are thorough sections on equine cardiovascular disease, diagnosis and treatment and updates on all of the other sections. The book is extremely thorough covering the normal heart (including P-V loops), cardiac imaging (including tons of high quality images and equine thoracic radiographs), echocardiography (including color Doppler and 3D echo), ECG, cardiac catheterization and angiography, and that is just section 1. Section 2 discusses clinical manifestation and is broken up into the common symptoms - syncope, cough, respiratory distress, etc. This is very helpful, particularly for students and interns or for advanced practitioners working emergency shifts. Section 3 is all about heart failure including treatment options and drug dosages. Section 4 covers all things dysrhythmia with numerous images of dysrhythmias. Section 5 covers all congenital diseases, degenerative, infective, pericardial, thromboembolic, systemic hypertension, pulmonary hypertension and heart worm. This section also has a chapter for each species (dog, cat, horse) on myocardial diseases. The section on thromboembolic disease has up to the minute information on traditional as well as new anticoagulants such as rivaroxaban and dabigatran with a thorough explanation of the current model of coagulation as well as how each of the anticoagulants work. This textbook is one that practitioners will go to frequently for up to date information on a plethora of cardiovascular disease concepts. I look forward to using this book frequently for teaching and clinical cases. Maureen McMichael, DVM, M.Ed., DACVECC, Professor of Emergency and Critical Care at Auburn University