It introduces key syndromes (e.g., Cushing’s, metabolic syndrome, DIC, shock types) with enough pathophysiology to understand treatment rationales, but avoids exhaustive lists of rare diseases.

The book uses many comparison tables (e.g., transudate vs. exudate, types of jaundice, acid-base disorders). Flowcharts for shock and electrolyte disturbances are especially helpful.

Target Audience: Medical students, Dentistry students, Nursing and other healthcare professions. Edition reviewed: 3rd/4th edition (EdiSES) Comparable to: Robbins Basic Pathology (pathophysiology chapters) + Kumar & Clark’s clinical medicine introduction. 1. Overall Impression (★★★☆☆ / ★★★★☆ – depends on need) Pontieri’s Fisiopatologia Generale is the standard textbook for pathophysiology in many Italian medical schools. It bridges the gap between normal physiology and clinical medicine, explaining how and why organs fail. It is not a pathology book (no histology/microscopy) and not a clinical manual — it stays focused on functional derangements.

Excellent for exam preparation in a course focused on pathophysiological mechanisms. Less useful as a quick reference or for deep molecular detail. 2. Strengths A. Clear, linear structure Each chapter follows a logical flow: Normal function → Pathophysiological mechanisms → Main clinical syndromes → Diagnostic reasoning basics. Example: The fever chapter is widely praised — starts from cytokines (IL-1, TNF, PGE2), explains the hypothalamic set-point shift, then contrasts fever with hyperthermia.