Open Textbooks
Permanent URI for this collection
Open Textbooks are freely available online and licensed for redistribution. Some open textbooks are also licensed for editing and modification. For more information about Virginia Tech Libraries' Open Education Initiative, see our OER Guide or contact Anita Walz.
Browse
Browsing Open Textbooks by Author "Binks, Andrew P."
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Cardiovascular Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical StudentsBinks, Andrew P. (Virginia Tech Publishing, 2022)
Cardiovascular Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students is an undergraduate medical-level resource for foundational knowledge of common cardiovascular diseases, disorders and pathologies. This text is designed for a course pre-clinical undergraduate medical curriculum and it is aligned to USMLE(r) (United States Medical Licensing Examination) content guidelines. The text is meant to provide the essential information from these content areas in a concise format that would allow learner preparation to engage in an active classroom. Clinical correlates and additional application of content is intended to be provided in the classroom experience. The text assumes that the students will have an understanding of basic cardiovascular physiology that will be helpful to understand the content presented here. This resource should be assistive to the learner later in medical school and for exam preparation given the material is presented in a succinct manner, with a focus on high-yield concepts. The 70-page text was created specifically for use by pre-clinical students at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and was based on faculty experience and peer review to guide development and hone important topics. Available formats
ISBN (PDF): 978-1-957213-02-6
ISBN (EPUB): 978-1-957213-03-3
ISBN (print): 978-1-957213-04-0
Click here to purchase a print copy
ISBN (Pressbooks): 978-1-957213-01-9
Pressbooks
Also available via LibreTexts Report errors
View errata How to adopt this book
Instructors reviewing, adopting, or adapting parts or the whole of the text are requested to register their interest by filling out this form. Instructors and subject matter experts interested in and sharing their original course materials relevant to pre-clinical education are requested to join the instructor portal. Features of this book - Detailed learning objectives are provided at the beginning of each chapter; - High resolution, color contrasting figures illustrate concepts, relationships, and processes throughout; - Subsection summary tables - End of chapter lists provide additional sources of information; and - Accessibility features including structured heads and alternative-text provide access for readers accessing the work via a screen-reader. Table of contents 1. Arrhythmias 2. Heart Failure 3. Hypertension 4. Valvular Disease 5. Heart Sounds and Murmurs 6. Congenital Heart Disease 7. Ischemic Heart Disease Suggested citation
Binks, Andrew., (2022). Cardiovascular Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students, Roanoke: Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. https://doi.org/10.21061/cardiovascularpathophysiology. Licensed with CC BY NC-SA 4.0. Other titles in this series - LeClair, R., (2021) Cell Biology, Genetics, and Biochemistry for Pre-Clinical Students - LeClair, R., (2022) Neuroscience for Pre-Clinical Students - Binks, A., (2022) Pulmonary Physiology for Pre-Clinical Students - Binks, A., (2022) Pulmonary Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students About the author
Dr. Andrew Binks is a cardiopulmonary physiologist who gained his BSc (Hons) in Physiological Sciences at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, then a MSc in Human and Applied Physiology from King’s College, London. He returned to Newcastle to do his PhD and study the underlying physiological mechanisms of dyspnea, the cardinal symptom of cardiopulmonary disease. He continued investigating dyspnea at Harvard School of Public Health as a postdoctoral fellow and then as a research scientist. After seven years at Harvard, Andrew took his first faculty position at the University of New England where he taught cardiovascular and pulmonary physiology to health profession and medical students. He continued to teach medical students their heart and lung physiology after moving to the University of South Carolina’s Medical School in Greenville where he also directed the school’s heart and lung pathophysiology courses. Andrew currently teaches heart and lung physiology and pathophysiology at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, directs the heart and lung pathophysiology course and has also served as the departmental director of faculty development. In his two decades of teaching medical physiology, Andrew has regularly drawn upon his dyspnea research experience to generate an active, clinically focused approach to medical education. This book is part of that approach and supports students preparing for class with the basic information with the intention to apply and contextualize that information in a guided case-based classroom experience. Andrew has published numerous peer-reviewed research papers and book chapters about dyspnea and about contemporary medical education. He has also given keynote presentations, faculty workshops and international webinars to promote effective medical education for the modern adult learner. Accessibility note
The University Libraries at Virginia Tech and Virginia Tech Publishing are committed to making its publications accessible in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The HTML (Pressbooks) and ePub versions of this book utilize header structures and include alternative text which allow for machine-readability. - Pulmonary Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical StudentsBinks, Andrew P. (Virginia Tech Publishing, 2022)
Pulmonary Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students is an undergraduate medical-level resource for foundational knowledge of pulmonary pathophysiology. This text is designed for a pre-clinical undergraduate medical curriculum and is aligned to USMLE(r) (United States Medical Licensing Examination) content guidelines. The text is meant to provide the essential information in a concise format that would allow learner preparation to engage in an active classroom. Clinical correlates and additional application of content is intended to be provided in the classroom experience. The text assumes that the students will have an understanding of basic pulmonary physiology that will be helpful to understand the content presented here. This resource should be assistive to the learner later in medical school and for exam preparation given the material is presented in a succinct manner, with a focus on high-yield concepts. The 82-page text was created specifically for use by pre-clinical students at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and was based on faculty experience and peer review to guide development and hone important topics. Available formats
ISBN (PDF): 978-1-957213-08-8
ISBN (EPUB): 978-1-957213-11-8
ISBN (print): 978-1-957213-09-5
Order a print copy here
ISBN (Pressbooks): 978-1-957213-10-1
Pressbooks
Also available via LibreTexts Report errors How to adopt this book
Instructors reviewing, adopting, or adapting parts or the whole of the text are requested to register their interest by filling out this form. Instructors and subject matter experts interested in and sharing their original course materials relevant to pre-clinical education are requested to join the instructor portal. Features of this book - Detailed learning objectives are provided at the beginning of each chapter; - High resolution, color contrasting figures illustrate concepts, relationships, and processes throughout; - Subsection summary tables - End of chapter lists provide additional sources of information; and - Accessibility features including structured heads and alternative-text provide access for readers accessing the work via a screen-reader. Table of contents 1. The Obstructive Lung Diseases 2. Upper Airway Infections 3. Lower Airway Infections 4. The Restrictive Lung Diseases 5. Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome 6. Lung Cancer 7. Pulmonary Embolism 8. Immunological Diseases of the Lung 9. Pleural Disease Suggested citation
Binks, Andrew., (2022). Pulmonary Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students, Roanoke: Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. https://doi.org/10.21061/pulmonarypathophysiology. Licensed with CC BY NC-SA 4.0. Other titles in this series - LeClair, R., (2021) Cell Biology, Genetics, and Biochemistry for Pre-Clinical Students - LeClair, R., (2022) Neuroscience for Pre-Clinical Students - Binks, A., (2022) Cardiovascular Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students - Binks, A., (2022) Pulmonary Physiology for Pre-Clinical Students About the author
Dr. Andrew Binks is a cardiopulmonary physiologist who gained his BSc (Hons) in Physiological Sciences at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, then a MSc in Human and Applied Physiology from King’s College, London. He returned to Newcastle to do his PhD and study the underlying physiological mechanisms of dyspnea, the cardinal symptom of cardiopulmonary disease. He continued investigating dyspnea at Harvard School of Public Health as a postdoctoral fellow and then as a research scientist. After seven years at Harvard, Andrew took his first faculty position at the University of New England where he taught cardiovascular and pulmonary physiology to health profession and medical students. He continued to teach medical students their heart and lung physiology after moving to the University of South Carolina’s Medical School in Greenville where he also directed the school’s heart and lung pathophysiology courses. Andrew currently teaches heart and lung physiology and pathophysiology at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, directs the heart and lung pathophysiology course and has also served as the departmental director of faculty development. In his two decades of teaching medical physiology, Andrew has regularly drawn upon his dyspnea research experience to generate an active, clinically focused approach to medical education. This book is part of that approach and supports students preparing for class with the basic information with the intention to apply and contextualize that information in a guided case-based classroom experience. Andrew has published numerous peer-reviewed research papers and book chapters about dyspnea and about contemporary medical education. He has also given keynote presentations, faculty workshops and international webinars to promote effective medical education for the modern adult learner. Accessibility note
The University Libraries at Virginia Tech and Virginia Tech Publishing are committed to making its publications accessible in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The HTML (Pressbooks) and ePub versions of this book utilize header structures and include alternative text which allow for machine-readability. - Pulmonary Physiology for Pre-Clinical StudentsBinks, Andrew P. (Virginia Tech Publishing, 2022)
Pulmonary Physiology for Pre-Clinical Students is an undergraduate medical-level resource for foundational knowledge of pulmonary physiology. This text is designed for a pre-clinical medical curriculum and is aligned to USMLE(r) (United States Medical Licensing Examination) content guidelines. The text is meant to provide the essential information in a concise format that would allow learner preparation to engage in an active classroom. Clinical correlates and additional application of content is intended to be provided in the classroom experience. This resource should be assistive to the learner later in medical school and for exam preparation given the material is presented in a succinct manner, with a focus on high-yield concepts. The 101-page text was created specifically for use by pre-clinical students at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and was based on faculty experience and peer review to guide development and hone important topics. View errata
Report errors Available Formats
ISBN (PDF): 978-1-957213-12-5
ISBN (EPUB): 978-1-957213-14-9
ISBN (print): 978-1-957213-13-2
Order a print copy here
ISBN (Pressbooks): 978-1-957213-15-6
Pressbooks
Also available in LibreTexts How to adopt this book
Instructors reviewing, adopting, or adapting parts or the whole of the text are requested to register their interest by filling out this form. Instructors and subject matter experts interested in and sharing their original course materials relevant to pre-clinical education are requested to join the instructor resource portal. Features of this book - Detailed learning objectives are provided at the beginning of each chapter; - High resolution, color contrasting figures illustrate concepts, relationships, and processes throughout; - Subsection summary tables - End of chapter lists provide additional sources of information; and - Accessibility features including structured heads and alternative-text provide access for readers accessing the work via a screen-reader. Table of contents 1. Fundamentals 2. Mechanics of the Lungs 3. Lung Volumes and Compliance 4. Distribution of Ventilation 5. Airflow and Airway Resistance 6. Dynamic Airway Compression 7. Fundamentals of Gas Exchange 8. Perfusion and Diffusion Limitations in Gas Exchange 9. Pulmonary Blood Flow 10. Pulmonary Capillaries and Non-Ventilatory Function 11. Arterial CO₂ and Ph 12. Alkalosis and Acidosis 13. Ventilation and Perfusion 14. The Alveolar Gas Equation and Alveolar-Arterial PO₂ Difference 15. Pulmonary Shunts 16. Gas Transport 17. Control of Breathing 18. Dyspnea Suggested citation
Binks, Andrew., (2022). Pulmonary Physiology for Pre-Clinical Students, Roanoke: Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. https://doi.org/10.21061/pulmonaryphysiology. Licensed with CC BY NC-SA 4.0. Other titles in this series - LeClair, R., (2021) Cell Biology, Genetics, and Biochemistry for Pre-Clinical Students - LeClair, R., (2022) Neuroscience for Pre-Clinical Students - Binks, A., (2022) Cardiovascular Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students - Binks, A., (2022) Pulmonary Pathophysiology for Pre-Clinical Students About the author
Dr. Andrew Binks is a cardiopulmonary physiologist who gained his BSc (Hons) in Physiological Sciences at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, then a MSc in Human and Applied Physiology from King’s College, London. He returned to Newcastle to do his PhD and study the underlying physiological mechanisms of dyspnea, the cardinal symptom of cardiopulmonary disease. He continued investigating dyspnea at Harvard School of Public Health as a postdoctoral fellow and then as a research scientist. After seven years at Harvard, Andrew took his first faculty position at the University of New England where he taught cardiovascular and pulmonary physiology to health profession and medical students. He continued to teach medical students their heart and lung physiology after moving to the University of South Carolina’s Medical School in Greenville where he also directed the school’s heart and lung pathophysiology courses. Andrew currently teaches heart and lung physiology and pathophysiology at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, directs the heart and lung pathophysiology course and has also served as the departmental director of faculty development. In his two decades of teaching medical physiology, Andrew has regularly drawn upon his dyspnea research experience to generate an active, clinically focused approach to medical education. This book is part of that approach and supports students preparing for class with the basic information with the intention to apply and contextualize that information in a guided case-based classroom experience. Andrew has published numerous peer-reviewed research papers and book chapters about dyspnea and about contemporary medical education. He has also given keynote presentations, faculty workshops and international webinars to promote effective medical education for the modern adult learner. Accessibility note
The University Libraries at Virginia Tech and Virginia Tech Publishing are committed to making its publications accessible in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The HTML (Pressbooks) and ePub versions of this book utilize header structures and include alternative text which allow for machine-readability.