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When first published in 2003, this indispensable handbook fulfilled
a critical need for information about the various causes of
insomnia. Updated and expanded, this new edition of the Clinical
Handbook of Insomnia offers healthcare providers the latest
diagnostic and treatment strategies, as well as research
developments, in the field of insomnia. With contributions from an
expanded team of leading researchers from 5 different countries,
this important resource includes new chapters on insomnia in
special populations such as children, in adolescents, in the
geriatric population, in menopausal women, and during pregnancy.
The first edition chapter on insomnia in other sleep disorders has
been divided and expanded into three comprehensive chapters
addressing insomnia in sleep-related breathing disorders, in
circadian rhythm disorders, and in sleep-related movement disorders
and other parasomnias. The chapter on insomnia in neurological and
medical disorders has also been split into two; an expanded one on
neurological illness and another on medical disorders. There is
also a new chapter on the association between insomnia and pain
disorders, and, crucially, a practical how-to' chapter aimed at
mid-level clinicians. The Clinical Handbook of Insomnia 2nd edition
also includes state-of-the-art discussion of important developments
made in recent years. Along with an overview of significant
advances in the treatment of insomnia, including four new
medications granted FDA approval and a number of others in the
pipeline, the text offers a wealth of of new data regarding the
pathophysiology of insomnia. Complete with a host of case studies,
charts, and graphs to illustrate the material, the Clinical
Handbook of Insomnia 2nd edition continues to fill an important
niche in the literature by addressing the issue in its multiple
forms and by presenting the information to clinicians in an easily
accessible format
It has been 5 years since publication of the first edition of Dr.
Attarian's Clinical Handbook of Insomnia which at the time was the
first significant cl- ical textbook dedicated to insomnia, an often
overlooked but important me- cal problem. The book was very well
received. There has now been sufficient new information on the
subject to warrant a second expanded edition of this very useful
volume. Then, as now, the approach is to emphasize the frequent
biological causes of insomnia rather than to attribute it primarily
to underlying psychological and emotional factors. This new edition
is an impressive major effort, having been expanded from 14 to 23
chapters including an extensive revision and updating of previous
chapters with new references and the ad- tion of many new authors.
An entirely new section of the book deals with insomnia in special
populations including teenagers, pregnancy, menopause, and the
geriatric population. Other new topics include insomnia as enco-
tered in primary care practice, the role of circadian rhythms, the
contribution of sleep related movement disorders to insomnia,
insomnia in pain disorders, and the interesting entity of
paradoxical insomnia, in which there is a large d- crepancy between
the objective and subjective estimation of quantity of sleep. This
collection within a single volume of practical information
concerning a common but often neglected disorder remains a very
useful addition to the armamentarium of the general or specialty
physician who wishes to properly address insomnia in an informed
and responsible manner.
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