1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910825379103321

Titolo

The Wiley-Blackwell handbook of mood disorders / / edited by Mick Power

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Chichester, West Sussex, U.K., : Wiley-Blackwell, c2013

ISBN

1-118-31615-0

1-118-31618-5

1-78539-385-5

1-118-31616-9

1-118-31621-5

Edizione

[2nd ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (629 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

PowerMichael J

Disciplina

616.85/27

Soggetti

Affective disorders

Depression, Mental

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Mood Disorders -- Contents -- About the Editor -- List of Contributors -- Foreword to First Edition -- Part I Unipolar Depression -- 1 The Classification and Epidemiology of Unipolar Depression -- Introduction -- Classification and Unipolar Depression -- Symptoms and Syndromes -- The Limits of Classification -- Leaky Classes and Comorbidity -- Depression and the Threshold Problem -- Competing Classifications -- Revising the Classifications -- Case Identification in Research -- Questionnaires and Interviews -- Bottom-Up and Top-Down Case Identification -- The Frequency of Depressive Disorder -- Depression and Age -- Is the Prevalence of Depression Increasing? -- Employment and Depression -- Depression and the Characteristics of Work -- Job Security and Depression -- Financial Strain and Depression -- The Childhood Antecedents of Later Depression -- Conclusions -- References -- 2 Biological Models of Unipolar Depression -- Introduction -- Genetic Models of Depression -- Endocrine Models of Depression -- Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis -- Hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis -- DHEA -- Neurochemical



Models of Depression -- Serotonin hypothesis of depression -- Noradrenergic theories -- Dopaminergic theories -- Cholinergic theories -- GABA-ergic theories -- Interactions of monoamines -- Neuroimaging Models of Depression -- Structural -- Functional imaging -- Neurochemical imaging -- Cellular Models of Depression -- Kindling model -- Intracellular signaling models -- Inflammatory Models of Depression -- Is Some Depression More Biological than Others? -- The concept of core depression -- Psychotic depression -- Atypical depression -- Postpartum and seasonal depression -- Depression as a result of organic illness -- Integrating the Neurobiology of Depression -- References -- 3 Cognitive Models and Issues.

Overview -- The Cognitive Model -- Evidence for the Cognitive Model -- What is the evidence regarding the existence of negative distortions in thoughts of depressed individuals? -- Are cognitive distortions related to environmental stimuli and do these distortions have an impact on emotion and behavior? -- What is the evidence that there are different levels of cognition, and that the presence of the different types of cognitions is important to the experience of depression? -- What is the evidence that early life experiences influence the development of negative cognitive structures? -- Conclusion -- References -- 4 Psychosocial Models and Issues in Major Depression -- Background -- Life Events, Vulnerability, and Depression -- Life events and difficulties -- Vulnerability -- Lifespan Models and Depression -- New Developments -- Adult attachment style -- Resilience -- Gene-environment interaction -- Issues Arising -- Intensive versus brief measurement -- Genetic models -- Impact on treatment and intervention -- References -- 5 The Developmental Psychopathology of Depression -- The Developmental Psychopathology Framework -- Early Childhood -- Salient developmental tasks -- Early childhood social environment and depressogenic deviations -- Mechanisms linking the early childhood environment to depression risk -- Social ecological factors -- Middle to Late Childhood -- Salient developmental tasks -- Childhood social environment and depressogenic deviations -- Mechanisms linking the childhood environment to depression risk -- Social ecological factors -- Adolescence -- Salient developmental tasks -- Adolescent social environment and depressogenic deviations -- Mechanisms linking the adolescent environment to depression risk -- Social ecological factors -- Conclusion -- References -- 6 Biological Treatment of Mood Disorders.

Pharmacotherapy of Unipolar Disorder -- Tricyclics -- SSRIs -- Other antidepressants -- Augmentation strategies -- Novel agents -- St John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) -- Pharmacotherapy of Bipolar Disorder -- Long-term prophylaxis -- Management of acute mania -- Management of depressive episodes -- Suicide prevention -- Pharmacotherapy of Late-Life Depression -- Interactions between Pharmacotherapy and Psychotherapy (Trial Evidence) -- Physical Treatments -- Transcranial procedures -- Implantation and invasive procedures -- References -- 7 CBT for Depression -- Introduction -- Cognitive-Behavioral Models -- The Practice of Therapy -- General comments -- Assessment -- The educational component -- Daily activities -- Monitoring thoughts and feelings -- Schematic models of self and others -- Termination issues, including relapse prevention -- New Developments and the Evaluation of CBT for Depression -- Cognitive-behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy -- Acceptance and commitment therapy -- Emotion-focused cognitive therapy -- Evaluation of CBT -- Conclusions -- References -- 8 Interpersonal Psychotherapy of Depression -- Background -- Conducting IPT --



Phases of treatment -- IPT for Unipolar Mood Disorders: Efficacy and Adaptations -- Acute treatment of major depression -- Maintenance treatment -- Geriatric depressed patients -- Depressed adolescents (IPT-A) -- Depressed medically ill patients -- Primary care -- Conjoint IPT for depressed patients with marital disputes (IPT-CM) -- Antepartum/postpartum depression -- Dysthymic disorder (IPT-D) -- Subsyndromally depressed hospitalized elderly patients -- Other Applications -- Training -- References -- 9 Marital Therapy for Dealing with Depression -- Introduction -- Depression and marital distress.

Depression as an interpersonal construct: How it affects both partners' negativity and negative attitudes -- Reinforcing and supporting behavior in couples with a depressed partner -- Reciprocity of depressed mood in couples with a depressed partner -- Seeking Therapeutic Treatment for Depression -- Couple therapy for the treatment of depression -- Efficacy of couple therapy as a treatment for depression -- Summary -- References -- 10 Depression: The Challenges of an Integrative, Biopsychosocial Evolutionary Approach -- Introduction -- The Heterogeneity of Depression -- Types, categories, dimensions, and discontinuities -- Gender -- Biopsychosocial Approaches -- Genotypes and phenotypes -- Emergence -- Biological-Social Interactive Processes -- Biosocial-Psychological Interface: The Implications of Humans Getting "Smart" -- Cognition as general-purpose abilities -- Some difficulties -- The Social Brain -- Becoming a Self in Social Contexts -- Behavioral and Emotion Adaptations -- Ecologies -- Life events -- Summary -- What Motives and Emotions Are Dysregulated in Depression? -- Blocked and thwarted motives -- Attachment and affiliative approaches to depression -- Social rank theory: Defeat, subordination, and arrested defenses in depression -- The Importance of Understanding Different Phases and Stages of Defensive Strategies in Aversive Environments -- Summary -- Emotional Patterns in Depression: Exploring Three Types of Emotions -- The Threat System and Depression -- Depression and the Drive System -- Contentment, Soothing, Affiliation, and Safeness -- The Patterns of Emotional Disturbance in Depression -- Complications -- The relationship of self with self -- The Fear of Positive Emotion-An Important but Commonly Unforeseen Complication in the Treatment of Depression -- Conclusion -- References -- Part II Bipolar Depression.

11 Classification and Epidemiology of Bipolar Disorder -- Introduction -- Historical Roots -- The Current Classification of Bipolar Disorder -- Classifying psychiatric disorders -- Evaluating the current classification system -- The Bipolar Spectrum -- Cyclothymia, hypomania, hyperthymia, and personality disorder -- Epidemiology -- Comorbidity -- Synthesis -- References -- 12 Neurobiological Theories of Bipolar Disorder -- Introduction -- Genetic Studies -- The Structure and Function of Neural Circuitry in Bipolar Disorder -- Histopathological studies -- Neuroimaging studies on brain structure -- Neuropsychological studies -- Candidate Risk Genes Regulating Brain Regional Structure -- Neurotrophic and Gliotrophic Factors -- The Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis -- Neurochemical Theories of Bipolar Disorder -- Cell Membrane and Signal Transduction Pathways -- G proteins and inositol -- Extracellular receptor-coupled kinase signaling cascade -- Glycogen synthase kinase 3 -- Broader Questions on the Nature and Course of Bipolar Disorder -- Neurodevelopmental traits or scars? -- Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: genetic, neuropathological, and neurocognitive similarities -- Conclusion -- References -- 13 Psychological Theories of and Therapies for Bipolar Disorder -- Cognitive Theories -- Cognitive therapy -- Behavioral Perspectives -- Family-Based Perspectives -- Family-based



interventions -- Biobehavioral Theories -- Circadian rhythm hypotheses -- Approach system dysregulation hypotheses -- Points of Integration -- Implications for Therapy and Research -- References -- 14 Further Integration of Patient, Provider, and Systems Treatment Approaches in Bipolar Disorder: Where New Evidence Meets Practice Reality -- A Theoretical Framework: Medical Models and Chronic Disease Management -- Patient Interventions -- Comparison of psychosocial interventions.

Provider Interventions.