An introductory textbook which clearly translates neuroscience to clinical-population observations and treatment. Illuminates addictions and mental illness as integrated diseases with shared neurodevelopmental underpinnings in adolescence. An invaluable foundation for undergraduates, scientists, physicians, and allied health care professionals.
This essential, concept-oriented book provides a highly integrative and translational approach to addiction, offering a deep understanding of the condition and its close biological-causal-developmental linkage with mental illness. The book explains addiction around five fundamental components that define disease: 1) Population Impact; 2) Symptom Sets; 3) Disorder of Anatomical Structure and Function; 4) Biological Risk Amplification; and 5) Diagnosis and Treatment. Key evidence and concepts from basic neuroscience are translated to epidemiological, clinical-observational, and treatment levels. The book discusses the broad reach and potent clinical capabilities of addiction psychiatry teams using integrative diagnostics and multi-dimensional treatment plans for patients across the entire addiction-mental illness spectrum. It introduces science-based psychotherapies, therapeutic experiences, medication and neurostimulatory treatments used by addiction psychiatrists in different settings to advance patients through all stages of recovery. An illustrated foundation for advanced undergraduates, physicians, allied clinicians, and scientists entering brain-behavioural health fields.
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A rapid impact, illustrated textbook on addiction-a neuropsychiatric disease and leading cause of multiorgan toxicity, injuries, and death.
Foreword;
1. Population impact- Epidemiology;
2. Specific symptom sets- Clinical Phenomenology;
3. A disorder of anatomical structure and function Neurobiology,
4. Biological risk amplification- Disease Vulnerability;
5. Diagnosis and treatment- Disease tracking, Reduction and Remission.
R. Andrew Chambers is an Addiction Psychiatrist and Professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis. Since graduating from Duke Medical School and Yale Psychiatry programs, he has conducted pioneering work in understanding the developmental neurocircuitry interlinking addiction and mental illness and translating this science to professional training and clinical practice. Dr Masterson is dual board-certified in General and Addiction Psychiatry from Indiana University and works as Associate Medical Director of Addiction Services at Linden Oaks Hospital in Naperville, Illinois. He is interested in how our hijacked motivations cause physical and mental illness via substance use, social media, improper nutrition, etc.