Surg Onc

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Complications

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Hey everyone,

I'm getting ready to do a surg onc rotation and was wondering if anyone had any suggestions as to what I should read and/or expect on the rotation. It's my first away and I certainly want to do well ... so any suggestions are appreciated.

Thanks.
 
Complications said:
Hey everyone,

I'm getting ready to do a surg onc rotation and was wondering if anyone had any suggestions as to what I should read and/or expect on the rotation. It's my first away and I certainly want to do well ... so any suggestions are appreciated.

Thanks.

no love? I'm reading surg onc chapters in gen surg books ... just doesn't seem like enough.
 
The M.D. Anderson Handbook of Surgical Oncology is a great resource and it fits in your pocket, if you're so inclined to be weighted down by books.
 
Sorry - didn't have time to respond to your post earlier.

There are tons of Surgical Oncology textbooks but for anyone but a surg onc fellow, they are too detailed. I agree with flightsurgeon that the MD Anderson book is a good choice for handbook - it will run you around $40 and fits into your pocket.

Also consider just borrowing a general surgery text from the library which is more detailed than Lawrence. Any of the 'biggies" - Cameron, Greenfield, the new ACS (my current fav) have chapters on the types of surgeries you are likely to see on a Surg Onc rotation - esophagectomies, pancreatic surgery, melanoma, hepato-biliary (read colorectal if you don't have a separate colorectal service at your institution); I think you will find that more than enough meat to wade through during your Sub-I.
 
one other thing - find out who your attending(s) are gonna be and see what they specialize in. i did a "surg onc" rotation that was endocrine (neck neck neck) and sarcoma (freaky things in the belly) and melanoma (serious melanoma).

at another place i did one and it was all liver. so the practices can vary greatly.

re: texts. it all depends on the topic. all gen surg texts are good for these topics.

maybe not helpful. but trying....
 
geekgirl said:
one other thing - find out who your attending(s) are gonna be and see what they specialize in. i did a "surg onc" rotation that was endocrine (neck neck neck) and sarcoma (freaky things in the belly) and melanoma (serious melanoma).

at another place i did one and it was all liver. so the practices can vary greatly.

re: texts. it all depends on the topic. all gen surg texts are good for these topics.

maybe not helpful. but trying....

Thanks so much everyone for your help. I ordered the M.D. Anderson Handbook of Surgical Oncology ... the rotation is at a different institution ... I'll try a medline search to see what they might focus on.

Thanks again.
 
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