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Record Nr. |
UNINA9910825379103321 |
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Titolo |
The Wiley-Blackwell handbook of mood disorders / / edited by Mick Power |
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Pubbl/distr/stampa |
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Chichester, West Sussex, U.K., : Wiley-Blackwell, c2013 |
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ISBN |
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1-118-31615-0 |
1-118-31618-5 |
1-78539-385-5 |
1-118-31616-9 |
1-118-31621-5 |
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Edizione |
[2nd ed.] |
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Descrizione fisica |
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1 online resource (629 p.) |
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Altri autori (Persone) |
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Disciplina |
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Soggetti |
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Affective disorders |
Depression, Mental |
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Lingua di pubblicazione |
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Formato |
Materiale a stampa |
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Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
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Note generali |
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Description based upon print version of record. |
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Nota di bibliografia |
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Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and indexes. |
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Nota di contenuto |
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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 |
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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 -- |
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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 |
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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. |
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