Every student will be affected by pregnancy,
either their mother’s, since what happens in
the womb does not, necessarily, stay in the
womb, or by someone else’s. As health care professionals
you will often encounter women of
childbearing age who may be pregnant, or you
may have children of your own, or maybe it is
a friend who is pregnant. In any case, pregnancy
and childbirth are relevant to all of us, and unfortunately,
these processes often culminate in negative
outcomes. For example, 50% of all embryos
are spontaneously aborted. Further more, prematurity
and birth defects are the leading causes of
infant mortality and major contributors to disabilities.
Fortunately, new strategies can improve
pregnancy outcomes, and health care professionals
have a major role to play in implementing these
initiatives. However, a basic knowledge of embryology
is essential to the success of these strategies,
and with this knowledge, every health care professional
can play a role in providing healthier babies.
To accomplish its goal of providing a basic
understanding of embryology and its clinical relevance,
Langman’s Medical Embryology retains its
unique approach of combining an economy of
text with excellent diagrams and clinical images.
It stresses the clinical importance of the subject
by providing numerous clinical examples that
result from abnormal embryological events. The
following pedagogic features and updates in the
12th edition help facilitate student learning.