Publication | Closed Access
Scott-Brown's Otolaryngology
426
Citations
0
References
1989
Year
Fifth EditionPediatric OtolaryngologyApplied AnatomySix-volume Otolaryngology TextAudiologyOtolaryngologyOtorhinolaryngologyDentoalveolar SurgeryClinical AnatomyTonsillectomyPalate SurgerySurgeryHead And Neck SurgeryNeurotologyArtsMedicineOrthopaedic SurgeryHearing Loss
Scott‑Brown’s Otolaryngology, fifth edition, edited by Alan G. Kerr, is a six‑volume, highly respected British otolaryngology text that has been a standard reference since 1952 and differs slightly from American counterparts. The fifth edition adds two volumes—pediatric otolaryngology and ear—making it longer than the fourth and updating content to remain current and authoritative.
<i>Scott-Brown's Otolaryngology</i>, fifth edition, edited by Alan G. Kerr, is a monumental, six-volume otolaryngology text. It has been a standard work among British otolaryngologists since 1952 and is respected highly by otolaryngologists throughout the world. The new edition is two volumes longer than the fourth edition owing to the inclusion of a volume on pediatric otolaryngology and a separate volume on the ear. The additional materials covered, and updating of subjects addressed in previous editions, render this text current and authoritative in most aspects. Its British origins produce a slightly different slant and minor practice differences when compared with standard, multivolume American otolaryngology texts such as<i>Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery</i>, edited by C. W. Cummins, C. J. Krause, D. E. Schuller, J. M. Fredrickson, and L. A. Harker (CV Mosby, 1986), and<i>Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery</i>, edited by M. M. Paparella and D. A. Shumrick (WB Saunders, 1980). Like these