Oxford American Handbook of Anesthesiology By Patrick M. McQuillan, M.D., Keith G. Allman, M.D., and Iain H. Wilson, M.D. New York, Oxford University Press, 2008. Pages: 1194. Price: $39.95.

A pocket manual is a trainee’s right hand. I picked up a copy of the Oxford American Handbook of Anesthesiology  at a time in my residency when I needed a condensed text to help me navigate rigorous surgical specialty rotations and found the manual to be a well-conceived, concise handbook. While not an exhaustive source, it is lengthy enough to provide summative information on a broad range of anesthesia topics, but at the same time it is portable enough to have within reach when a quick quandary arises.

Starting into my introductory clerkships in pediatric and cardiac anesthesiology, I already had a copy of Ezekiel’s Handbook of Anesthesiology  1that I had purchased for $17 the week before starting residency. Now, 17 months later, the book was speckled with marginalia, taped twice down the spine with surgical tape, and worn from being as integral to my operating room day as a stethoscope. Starting into my subspecialty anesthesia rotations and in anticipation of the annual anesthesia in training exam, I left Ezekiel in the locker and adopted the more voluminous Oxford text, anticipating a more in-depth resource for specialty knowledge and broad review.

The Oxford Handbook  required some logistic adjustment. Too thick to occupy Ezekiel’s spot in the back pocket of my scrubs, the book rested instead on the anesthesia machine for reading between cases. On call, it stayed in the call room for consultation instead of in my white coat pocket. It has proven to be what it claims: not a pocket book, but a handbook—a concise reference that is easier to tote than the tomes by Miller or Barash or Morgan2–4but that still covers the practical highlights of these texts. Also, the book may not be structurally suited to outlasting residency training. After a couple of months’ use, the binding had failed, leaving the cover half separated and patched (like my copy of Ezekiel) with its own length of surgical tape.

On the whole, the content of the book exceeded my expectations. It approximated the most practical information of much larger texts into succinct points and gave enough detail to be useful board preparation without being encumbered with excessive detail. In a preoperative evaluation of a patient with Takayasu’s Arteritis coming for vascular surgery, I consulted the Oxford Handbook  and found the main points that I would have searched out in a much longer read of a much larger text such as Stoelting’s Anesthesia and Coexisting Disease .5It was similarly useful in a pediatric patient with achondroplasia coming for an outpatient procedure. The handbook contains a section summarizing common surgical procedures that reads like a portable equivalent of Jaffe’s Anesthesiologist’s Manual of Surgical Procedures .6In a period of training when I was introduced to procedures ranging from thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repairs to electroconvulsive therapy, I found that the synopses on case management reliably prepared me for practical management of the anesthetic and familiarized me with the salient points of relevant physiology. There was one critical gap in the content of the Oxford Handbook  that made me wish at times that I still had my Ezekiel manual in my back pocket—the Oxford Handbook  doesn’t have a pharmacology and dosage section. It was no help when I grabbed the text looking for the milligram per kilogram dosage of clindamycin for a pediatric patient, or titration parameters for dexmedetomidine, or alprostadil. This omission is the only categorical flaw I found in the text. Any other answers I didn’t find in its pages were perhaps unreasonable to expect from a handbook—no details on the analysis of thromboelastograms, for instance.

Doctors McQuillan, Allman, and Wilson have assembled an excellent resource for the anesthesia trainee that has much to offer to even experienced providers. The section on anesthetic risk, for instance, provides a very palatable format for expressing the risks of anesthesia to patients in lay terms, such as the probability of winning the lottery or experiencing a mishap in traffic. The handbook is an impressively condensed, useful resource that offers high-yield information from a much larger library in a single volume that totes easily into the operating room.

Mayo Clinic Rochester, Rochester, Minnesota. shakespeare.william@mayo.edu

1.
Ezekiel MR: Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2007–2008 edition. Laguna Hills, California, Current Clinical Strategies Publishing, 2007–2008
2.
Miller RD: (ed) Miller’s Anesthesia, 6th edition. New York, Churchill Livingstone, 2004Miller RD
New York
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Churchill Livingstone
3.
Barash PG, Cullen BF, Stoelting RK: (eds) Clinical Anesthesia, 5th edition. Philadelphia, JB Lippincott, 2006Barash PG, Cullen BF, Stoelting RK
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JB Lippincott
4.
Morgan GE, Mikhail MS, Murray MJ: (eds) Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th edition. New York, Lange Medical Books, 2006Morgan GE, Mikhail MS, Murray MJ
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Lange Medical Books
5.
Stoelting RK, Dierdorf SF: Anesthesia and Co-Existing Disease, 4th edition. New York, Churchill Livingstone, 2002
New York
,
Churchill Livingstone
6.
Jaffe RA, Samuels SI: Anesthesiologist’s Manual of Surgical Procedures, 3rd edition. Philadelphia, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2003
Philadelphia
,
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins