Internal
Medicine Books
Internal
Medicine, nonsurgical medical specialty concerned with
diseases of internal organs in adults. Physicians who
specialize in the field, known as internists, are skilled
in disease prevention and in managing complex disorders
of the body. Internists may be either generalists or
specialists.
General internists typically act as personal physicians,
developing long-term relationships with patients. Internists
give patients regular physical examinations, offer preventive
care, diagnose and treat most nonsurgical illnesses,
and refer serious or unusual cases to an appropriate
specialist. If a patient complains of persistent stomach
problems, for example, a general internist might refer
the patient to a gastroenterologist, an internist who
specializes in disorders of the digestive system.
Within the field of internal medicine, nine subspecialties
are recognized: cardiology, the treatment of diseases
of the heart and blood vessels; endocrinology, the study
of glands and other structures that secrete hormones;
gastroenterology, the care of conditions of the digestive
tract, liver, and pancreas; hematology, the study of
blood and blood-forming tissues; infectious disease,
the study of severe or unusual infections; nephrology,
the diagnosis and treatment of kidney diseases; oncology,
the study and treatment of cancerous tumors; pulmonary
disease, concerned with disorders of the lungs and other
components of the respiratory system; and rheumatology,
the treatment of disorders involving joints and other
connective tissues. An additional subspecialty gaining
prominence is geriatrics, the study of diseases affecting
older adults.
The development and widespread use of many technologies
have enabled internists to perform procedures that formerly
were considered the responsibility of surgeons. For
example, a procedure called endoscopy, performed using
an illuminated tubular instrument called an endoscope,
permits doctors to examine and photograph internal organs
and manipulate tools inside the body without invasive
surgery. Another tool, a narrow tubular device called
a cardiac catheter, permits physicians to inject drugs
or fluids directly into the heart.
The origins of internal medicine date back to the late
19th century, when the practices of general medicine
and surgery began to split into separate disciplines.
Over time, internists became hospital-based generalists
who played a role somewhere between those played today
by family physicians and surgical specialists. Since
the mid-1900s internal medicine in the United States
has shifted from a primarily generalist field to a discipline
in which roughly 65 percent of all internists are certified
as subspecialists.
Those seeking a career in internal medicine must obtain
a medical degree and complete a three-year in-hospital
internal medicine training program. Internists interested
in a subspecialty must spend one or two additional years
studying that discipline and must pass a certification
test. The specialty board for internal medicine, the
American Board of Internal Medicine, was established
in 1936.
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