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Catatonia

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This book will benefit clinicians managing catatonic phenomena as well as researchers interested in pursuing further investigations. It covers in great detail the psychopathology and neurobiology o...
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  • 22 May 2004
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During the 20th century, catatonia all but dropped off the agenda of mainstream psychiatric research. However, several dedicated research groups, represented in this volume, continued to report original data highlighting catatonia as a relevant and ideal subject for clinical study. This book, which exemplifies the unparalleled breadth of the knowledge gained, will benefit clinicians managing catatonic phenomena as well as researchers interested in pursuing further investigations.

This book covers in great detail the psychopathology and neurobiology of catatonia, focusing on the history, epidemiology, etiology, diagnosis and treatment of the disorder. This comprehensive volume

• Offers a wide representation of the historical and worldwide literature on the many variants of catatonia in a single, well-organized text.
• Includes work presented by the original investigators, many of whom work outside the United States and have had their previous studies published only in non-English journals.
• Covers alternative opinions and perspectives on catatonia, contributing novel and illuminating perspectives on the syndrome.
• Addresses areas of controversy—including disagreements over treatment and the nosologic status of catatonia—head-on, in a balanced, evidence-based presentation.
• Balances practical clinical material with the underlying neurobiology, presenting clinical aspects in the context of history, epidemiology, cross-cultural perspectives, and neurobiological findings and highlighting the richness and intellectual attraction of the study of the disorder.

Catatonia is unique in offering a diverse, international group of contributors and such a comprehensive, up-to-date review of the clinical and scientific literature, spanning the breadth of contemporary understanding about the nature, meaning, and importance of the syndrome.

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Price: £62.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Imprint: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Publication Date: 22 May 2004
ISBN: 9781585620852
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

MEDICAL / Psychiatry / General

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Catatonia: From Psychopathology to Neurobiology is an excellent small volume on a (of late) neglected topic. It is an edited book with some 29 contributors, but it doesn't suffer from the problems that many such works do. Authors in one chapter frequently refer (accurately) to the contents of another chapter, as if the various authors had actually read the contributions of the others, which, clearly, they did. It actually has the flow of a single-authored work but with the advantage that experts in each area have authored the corresponding chapters.

Dr. Stanley N. Caroff is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and Chief of Inpatient Services at the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He also serves as Director of the Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome Information Service and is a member of the Board of Directors of the Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States.

Stephan C. Mann, M.D., is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Director of Clinical Psychopharmacology at the Mental Health Clinic of the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He also serves on the Professional Advisory Council of the Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome Information Service.

Andrew Francis, Ph.D., M.D., is Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the State University of New York at Stony Brook School of Medicine, where he is Chief of Inpatient Services and Medical Director of the Day Treatment Program. He also serves on the Professional Advisory Council of the Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome Information Service.

Gregory Fricchione, M.D., is Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School and Associate Chief of Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he also serves as Director of the Division of Psychiatry and Medicine and Director of the Division of International Psychiatry.

Contributors
Preface
Chapter 1. History
Chapter 2. Epidemiology
Chapter 3. Nosology
Chapter 4. Clinical examination
Chapter 5. Standardized instruments
Chapter 6. Laboratory findings
Chapter 7. Neuroimaging and neurophysiology
Chapter 8. Periodic catatonia
Chapter 9. Malignant catatonia
Chapter 10. Medical catatonia
Chapter 11. Drug-induced catatonia
Chapter 12. Pharmacotherapy
Chapter 13. Convulsive therapy
Chapter 14. Prognosis and complications
Chapter 15. Genetics
Chapter 16. Animal models
Chapter 17. Brain evolution and the meaning of catatonia
Index