
The Netter Collection of Medical Illustrations: Integumentary System, Volume 4
- 3rd Edition - November 24, 2023
- Imprint: Elsevier
- Author: Bryan E. Anderson
- Language: English
- Hardback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 8 8 0 8 9 - 3
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 8 8 3 2 6 - 9
Offering a concise, highly visual approach to the basic science and clinical pathology of the integumentary system, this updated volume in The Netter Collection of Medical I… Read more

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Request a sales quoteOffering a concise, highly visual approach to the basic science and clinical pathology of the integumentary system, this updated volume in The Netter Collection of Medical Illustrations (the CIBA "Green Books") contains unparalleled didactic illustrations reflecting the latest medical knowledge. Revised by Dr. Bryan E. Anderson, Integumentary System, Volume 4 integrates core concepts of anatomy, physiology, and other basic sciences with common clinical correlates across health, medical, and surgical disciplines. Classic Netter art, updated and new illustrations, and modern imaging continue to bring medical concepts to life and make this timeless work an essential resource for students, clinicians, and educators.
- Provides a highly visual guide to the skin, hair, and nails, from normal anatomy and histology to pathology, dermatology, and common issues in plastic surgery and wound healing
- Covers new topics throughout, including infantile hemangiomas, COVID-19, porphyria cutanea tarda, and Muir-Torre syndrome
- Provides a concise overview of complex information by integrating anatomical and physiological concepts with clinical scenarios
- Compiles Dr. Frank H. Netter’s master medical artistry—an aesthetic tribute and source of inspiration for medical professionals for over half a century—along with new art in the Netter tradition for each of the major body systems, making this volume a powerful and memorable tool for building foundational knowledge and educating patients or staff
- NEW! An eBook version is included with purchase. The eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures, and references, with the ability to search, make notes and highlights, and have content read aloud
Diverse worldwide market; both practitioners and trainees across medical and health professions; institutions. For the series: medical schools with a systems-based curriculum (students, instructors, staff, library); clinical practitioners at all levels (especially nonspecialists and specialists interested in areas outside of their specialty); Netter fans and gift-buyers for Netter fans. For the book/volume: offices/depts/individuals in dermatology.
- Cover image
- Title page
- Table of Contents
- Copyright
- About the Series
- About the Author
- Preface
- About the Artist
- 1. Anatomy, embryology, and physiology
- Plate 1.1 Embryology of the skin
- Plate 1.2 Normal skin anatomy
- Plate 1.3 Normal skin histology
- Plate 1.4 Skin physiology: The process of keratinization
- Plate 1.5 Normal skin flora
- Plate 1.6 Vitamin D metabolism
- Plate 1.7 Photobiology
- Plate 1.8 Wound healing
- Plates 1.9-1.10 Morphology
- 2. Benign growths
- Plate 2.1 Acrochordon
- Plate 2.2 Becker’s nevus (smooth muscle hamartoma)
- Plate 2.3 Dermatofibroma (sclerosing hemangioma)
- Plate 2.4 Eccrine poroma
- Plate 2.5 Eccrine spiradenoma
- Plate 2.6 Eccrine syringoma
- Plates 2.7–2.8 Ephelides and lentigines
- Plate 2.9 Epidermal inclusion cyst
- Plate 2.10 Epidermal nevus
- Plate 2.11 Fibrofolliculoma
- Plate 2.12 Fibrous papule
- Plate 2.13 Ganglion cyst
- Plate 2.14 Glomus tumor and glomangioma
- Plate 2.15 Hidradenoma papilliferum
- Plate 2.16 Hidrocystoma
- Plate 2.17 Keloid and hypertrophic scar
- Plate 2.18 Leiomyoma
- Plate 2.19 Lichenoid keratosis
- Plate 2.20 Lipoma
- Plate 2.21 Median raphe cyst
- Plates 2.22-2.24 Melanocytic nevi
- Plate 2.25 Milia
- Plate 2.26 Neurofibroma
- Plate 2.27 Nevus lipomatosus superficialis
- Plate 2.28 Nevus of Ota and nevus of Ito
- Plate 2.29 Nevus sebaceus
- Plate 2.30 Osteoma cutis
- Plate 2.31 Palisaded encapsulated neuroma
- Plate 2.32 Pilar cyst (trichilemmal cyst)
- Plate 2.33 Porokeratosis
- Plate 2.34 Pyogenic granuloma
- Plate 2.35 Reticulohistiocytoma
- Plate 2.36 Seborrheic keratosis
- Plate 2.37 Spitz nevus
- 3. Malignant growths
- Plate 3.1 Adnexal carcinoma
- Plate 3.2 Angiosarcoma
- Plates 3.3–3.4 Basal cell carcinoma
- Plate 3.5 Bowen disease
- Plate 3.6 Bowenoid papulosis
- Plate 3.7 Cutaneous metastases
- Plate 3.8 Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans
- Plate 3.9 Mammary and extramammary paget disease
- Plate 3.10 Kaposi sarcoma
- Plate 3.11 Keratoacanthoma
- Plates 3.12–3.14 Melanoma
- Plate 3.15 Merkel cell carcinoma
- Plates 3.16–3.17 Mycosis fungoides
- Plate 3.18 Sebaceous carcinoma
- Plates 3.19–3.20 Squamous cell carcinoma
- 4. Rashes
- Plate 4.1 Acanthosis nigricans
- Plates 4.2–4.3 Acne
- Plate 4.4 Acne keloidalis nuchae
- Plate 4.5 Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (sweet syndrome)
- Plates 4.6–4.7 Allergic contact dermatitis
- Plates 4.8–4.9 Atopic dermatitis
- Plates 4.10–4.11 Autoinflammatory syndromes
- Plates 4.12–4.13 Bug bites
- Plate 4.14 Calciphylaxis
- Plates 4.15–4.17 Cutaneous lupus
- Plate 4.18 Cutis laxa
- Plates 4.19–4.20 Dermatomyositis
- Plate 4.21 Disseminated intravascular coagulation
- Plate 4.22 Elastosis perforans serpiginosa
- Plates 4.23–4.24 Eruptive xanthomas
- Plate 4.25 Erythema ab igne
- Plate 4.26 Erythema annulare centrifugum
- Plates 4.27–4.28 Erythema multiforme, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Plate 4.29 Erythema nodosum
- Plate 4.30 Fabry disease
- Plate 4.31 Fixed drug eruption
- Plates 4.32–4.33 Gout
- Plate 4.34 Graft-versus-host disease
- Plate 4.35 Granuloma annulare
- Plate 4.36 Graves disease and pretibial myxedema
- Plate 4.37 Hidradenitis suppurativa (acne inversa)
- Plate 4.38 Infantile hemangiomas
- Plate 4.39 Irritant contact dermatitis
- Plate 4.40 Keratosis pilaris
- Plates 4.41–4.42 Langerhans cell histiocytosis
- Plate 4.43 Leukocytoclastic vasculitis
- Plate 4.44 Lichen planus
- Plate 4.45 Lichen simplex chronicus
- Plate 4.46 Lower extremity vascular insufficiency
- Plates 4.47–4.48 Mast cell disease
- Plate 4.49 Morphea
- Plate 4.50 Myxedema
- Plate 4.51 Necrobiosis lipoidica
- Plate 4.52 Necrobiotic xanthogranuloma
- Plate 4.53 Neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis
- Plates 4.54–4.55 Ochronosis
- Plate 4.56 Oral manifestations in blood dyscrasias
- Plate 4.57 Phytophotodermatitis
- Plate 4.58 Pigmented purpura
- Plate 4.59 Pityriasis rosea
- Plate 4.60 Pityriasis rubra pilaris
- Plate 4.61 Polyarteritis nodosa
- Plate 4.62 Pruritic urticarial papules and plaques of pregnancy
- Plate 4.63 Pseudoxanthoma elasticum
- Plates 4.64–4.66 Psoriasis
- Plate 4.67 Radiation dermatitis
- Plate 4.68 Reactive arthritis
- Plate 4.69 Rosacea
- Plates 4.70–4.71 Sarcoid
- Plate 4.72 Scleroderma (systemic sclerosis)
- Plate 4.73 Seborrheic dermatitis
- Plates 4.74–4.75 Skin manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease
- Plate 4.76 Stasis dermatitis
- Plate 4.77 Urticaria
- Plate 4.78 Vitiligo
- 5. Autoimmune blistering diseases
- Plates 5.1–5.2 Basement membrane zone, hemidesmosome, and desmosome
- Plate 5.3 Bullous pemphigoid
- Plate 5.4 Mucous membrane pemphigoid
- Plate 5.5 Dermatitis herpetiformis
- Plate 5.6 Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita
- Plate 5.7 Linear immunoglobulin a bullous dermatosis
- Plate 5.8 Paraneoplastic pemphigus
- Plate 5.9 Pemphigus foliaceus
- Plate 5.10 Pemphigus vulgaris
- 6. Infectious diseases
- Plate 6.1 Actinomycosis
- Plate 6.2 Blastomycosis
- Plate 6.3 Chancroid
- Plate 6.4 Coccidioidomycosis
- Plate 6.5 COVID-19
- Plate 6.6 Cryptococcosis
- Plate 6.7 Cutaneous larva migrans
- Plates 6.8–6.10 Dermatophytoses
- Plates 6.11–6.13 Herpes simplex virus
- Plate 6.14 Histoplasmosis
- Plate 6.15 Leprosy (Hansen Disease)
- Plates 6.16–6.17 Lice
- Plate 6.18 Lyme disease
- Plate 6.19 Lymphogranuloma venereum
- Plates 6.20–6.21 Meningococcemia
- Plate 6.22 Molluscum contagiosum
- Plate 6.23 Paracoccidioidomycosis
- Plate 6.24 Scabies
- Plate 6.25 Sporotrichosis
- Plates 6.26–6.27 Staphylococcus aureus
- Plates 6.28–6.30 Syphilis
- Plate 6.31 Varicella
- Plates 6.32–6.33 Herpes zoster (shingles)
- Plates 6.34–6.35 Verrucae (warts)
- 7. Hair and nail diseases
- Plate 7.1 Normal structure and function of the hair follicle apparatus
- Plate 7.2 Normal structure and function of the nail unit
- Plate 7.3 Alopecia areata
- Plate 7.4 Androgenic alopecia
- Plates 7.5–7.7 Common nail disorders
- Plate 7.8 Hair shaft abnormalities
- Plate 7.9 Telogen effluvium and anagen effluvium
- Plate 7.10 Trichotillomania
- 8. Nutritional and metabolic diseases
- Plates 8.1–8.2 Beriberi
- Plate 8.3 Hemochromatosis
- Plate 8.4 Metabolic diseases: Niemann-Pick disease, von Gierke disease, and galactosemia
- Plates 8.5–8.6 Pellagra
- Plates 8.7–8.8 Phenylketonuria
- Plate 8.9 Porphyria cutanea tarda
- Plates 8.10–8.11 Scurvy
- Plate 8.12 Vitamin A deficiency
- Plates 8.13–8.14 Vitamin K deficiency and vitamin K antagonists
- Plate 8.15 Wilson disease
- 9. Genodermatoses and syndromes
- Plate 9.1 Addison disease
- Plate 9.2 Amyloidosis
- Plate 9.3 Basal cell nevus syndrome
- Plate 9.4 Carney complex
- Plate 9.5 Cushing syndrome and Cushing disease
- Plate 9.6 Cushing syndrome: Pathophysiology
- Plate 9.7 Down syndrome
- Plate 9.8 Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
- Plate 9.9 Marfan syndrome
- Plate 9.10 Muir-Torre syndrome
- Plates 9.11–9.12 Neurofibromatosis
- Plate 9.13 Tuberous sclerosis
- Selected references
- Index
- Edition: 3
- Published: November 24, 2023
- Imprint: Elsevier
- Language: English
- Hardback ISBN: 9780323880893
- eBook ISBN: 9780323883269
BA
Bryan E. Anderson
Affiliations and expertise
Professor and Medical Director, Dermatology, Penn State Cancer Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, USA