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Veterinary Clinical Parasitology |  | Authors: Margaret W. Sloss, Russell L. Kemp, Anne M. Zajac Publisher: Iowa State Press Category: Book
List Price: $44.99 Buy Used: $38.47 as of 3/17/2010 21:22 MDT details You Save: $6.52 (14%)
Used (11) from $38.47
Seller: metropole_press Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 1025007
Media: Plastic Comb Edition: 6th Pages: 198 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.2 x 0.8
ISBN: 0813817331 Dewey Decimal Number: 636.089696 EAN: 9780813817330 ASIN: 0813817331
Publication Date: February 28, 1994 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This sixth edition of this veterinary text has been undertaken by the American Association of Veterinary Parasitologists. This edition aims to provide an aid in the diagnosis of internal and external parasitisms that have recently been recognised as pathogens of domestic animals and information on improvements in diagnostic techniques. Recognition of important morphologic characteristics of parasites that can be observed during standard laboratory tests is also emphasised. Individual chapters include the following topics: faecal examination in the daignosis of parasitism; miscellaneous protozoan and helminth parasites; parasites of the blood; arthropods of veterinary importance in North America; and parasites of fish.
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| Customer Reviews: Great Book! September 9, 2009 Paulette J. Phillips (Westfield, Wisconsin United States) Have horses, have microscope, have plenty of fresh manure! Just needed a book that showed me what the heck I was supposed to be looking for!!! This book has been a money saver and a fantastic learning experience! Up to now I was just blindly de-worming my horses on a drug rotation basis. Now I do my own fecal exams and worm according to what I see. This book also tells you how to make a "flotation" solution for parasitic eggs (eggs float) and another solution for the nematodes themselves (worms sink). Super-easy! Fun and educational!! I strongly recommend this book to any horse keepers!!
veterinary clinical parasitology seventh edition June 15, 2008 sky lynn deir (midvale, UT USA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
the book came some what handy, but I would have like more information than it gave. for example what drugs were used to treat the animals, or the difinative host and intermidiate host.
Still the best! September 15, 2007 Mararichi (Havana, FL United States) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Miss Reith is referring to the 6th edition not the 5th. The 5th edition is still the premier reference for any parasitology student. Unfortunately the 6th edition and later editions were edited, diluted and reformatted to become a nice fecal collector used to house train a pet. Useless is a kinder description. Find, buy any edition before the 6th!
Still an essential book for the practitioner April 11, 2001 Omar O. Barriga (Santiago Chile) 14 out of 17 found this review helpful
I was surprised at Dr.? Reith's review of this book. Contrary to what Reith affirms, the book IS divided into host sections, al least for the parasites diagnosed by fecal examination; actually, there are 28 pages and 55 photographs devoted to dogs and cats, 16 pages and 32 photographs devoted to ruminants, etc. Parasites of the urinary tract, genital tracts, or skin are in a separate chapter, as are blood parasites and arthropods. This does not bother me terribly. I wish Reith had mentioned the "very common parasites" that are not included; I have not missed any yet of the common ones in a veterinary practice. I have a fairly extensive collection of parasitology diagnosis books and, for the variety and/or quality of the photos, this is still the best. I only wish that some of the photos were in color but I am not sure I could afford it. I still recommend it very strongly to my students of Veterinary Parasitology and to veterinary practitioners.
Not nearly as useful for reference as the previous edition. July 23, 1999 Sue B Reith (Bainbridge Island, WA USA) 51 out of 52 found this review helpful
The features that made the 5th edition so helpful as a reference, like separating the book into sections according to the type of host (ie: dog, sheep, horse, rodent), and showing photos of the parasites that commonly are found in or on that host, have been removed. Additionally, some very common parasites are not even included in this 6th edition! Rather than a good reference book, it has now been reduced to somewhat of a primer on parasitology, one that introduces you to 'types' of parasites, rather than one that actually enables you to recognize characteristics of one parasite that distinguish it from another, similar parasite so that you can specifically identify it. This book is no longer useful, as the previous edition was, for reference work. I do not recommend it.
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