New York: Springer, 2017. — 292 p. Expanding on the critical contributions of previous editions, this updated and comprehensive resource covers the latest diagnostic criteria of insomnia. The book is thematically divided into two parts. The first section consists of chapters on nomenclature, epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis and differential diagnosis, complications and...
Philadelphia: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2011. — 512 p. This pocket-sized handbook is a practical guide to the evaluation and management of sleep disorders. It is written by distinguished sleep medicine experts and covers a broad, multidisciplinary range of topics in neurology, pulmonary medicine, psychiatry and pediatrics.
Elsevier, 2012. — 813 p. — ISBN: 978-1-4377-1703-7 Therapy in Sleep Medicine, by Drs. Teri J. Barkoukis, Jean K. Matheson, Richard Ferber, and Karl Doghramji, provides the clinically focused coverage you need for rapid diagnosis and effective treatment of sleep disorders. A multidisciplinary team of leading authorities presents the latest on sleep breathing disorders (including...
Saunders, 2011. — 670 p. Written by Richard Berry, MD, Fundamentals of Sleep Medicine is a brand-new multimedia resource that provides a concise, clinically focused alternative to larger sleep medicine references. Get everything you need to know about the evaluation and management of sleep disorders, including the interpretation of sleep studies and the use of the newly...
N.-Y.: Elsevier/Saunders, 2014. — 704 p. Sleep Medicine is a rapidly growing and changing field. Experienced sleep medicine clinicians and educators Richard B. Berry, MD and Mary H. Wagner, MD present the completely revised, third edition of Sleep Medicine Pearls featuring 150 cases that review key elements in the evaluation and management of a wide variety of sleep disorders....
Springer, 2014. — 285 p. — ISBN: 978-1-4614-9086-9 The cognitive and behavioral implications of sleep deprivation have been noted in the medical literature for many years. In addition, emerging research continues to demonstrate the contribution of sleep deprivation to some of the most common and costly health conditions today.Sleep Deprivation and Disease provides clinically...
2nd edition. — European Respiratory Society, 2023. — 466 p. — ISBN: 978-1-84984-163-4. Sleep medicine is a multidisciplinary field, with patients referred to specializing physicians from all areas of medicine. The new edition of the ERS Handbook of Respiratory Sleep Medicine is truly reflective of this diversity, covering everything from neurobiology to digital health. Broad in...
Wolters Kluwer, 2015. — 527 p. — ISBN: 9781496300522 A companion to the second edition of Fundamentals of Sleep Technology , the Fundamentals of Sleep Technology Workbook , by the American Association of Sleep Technologists, covers what you need to know as a practicing sleep technologist or when studying for registry exams. Multiple-choice questions, discussion questions, and...
Springer, 2005. — 627 p. As the title suggests, and unlike other existing books on sleep medicine, Neuroendocrine Correlates of Sleep/Wakefulness will be devoted primarily to endocrine regulation of the behavioral state control. It will address a wide spectrum of sleep./wakefulness phenomena (both animals and humans), including pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management. From...
Springer, 2021. — 345 p. — ISBN: 978-3-030-62262-6. This comprehensive book addresses all elements of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and sleep interaction, as well as ANS alterations in sleep and how these impact primary and comorbid sleep dysfunction. It meets the market need for a comprehensive text that deals with ANS changes in sleep and how these impact various...
CRC Press, 2023. — 280 p. — ISBN: 978-0-367-43011-5. This book describes control of ventilation during sleep in both health and disease states. The topics are presented in a fashion that can be easily comprehended with many figures to illustrate complex concepts. Thus, a wide range of topics, starting from the site of normal respiratory rhythm generation to chemoreceptor...
NY: Informa Healthcare, 2003. — 186 p. infant polysomnography (IPSG) holds great promise for the study of SIDS and other sleep and breathing disorders, the functional integrity of the developing brain, and early cardiorespiratory functioning. Although guidelines and standards have been developed for polysomnography, there has been no standardized procedural single source or...
DK Publishing, 2021. — 224 p. — ISBN: 9780744033687. Experts of every kind are queueing up to warn us that lack of sleep, or the wrong kind, will bring down a bewildering array of dire consequences. Heather Darwall-Smith's message in this book is simple: don't panic! Humans are biologically programmed to sleep, and by interrogating all the factors - sociological, physiological,...
American Psychiatric Association Publishing, 2020. — 422 p. Featuring the contributions of more than two dozen national and international experts, Clinical Sleep Medicine: A Comprehensive Guide for Mental Health and Other Medical Professionals is the definitive resource on the core concepts of sleep medicine. With the most up-to-date information and the latest guidelines, this...
3rd edition. — Jones & Bartlett Learning, 2021. — 1368 p. — ISBN: 9781284172218. Spriggs's Essentials of Polysomnography, Third Edition is a comprehensive, full-color text designed specifically for sleep technicians and professionals. Updates and additions make this book a thorough and up-to-date resource for professionals, and the new all-in-one package design makes it the...
Oxford University Press, 2017. — 168 p. This Very Short Introduction explains how organisms can 'know' the time and reveals what we now understand of the nature and operation of chronobiological processes. Covering variables such as light, the metabolism, human health, and the seasons, Foster and Kreitzman illustrate how jet lag and shift work can impact on human well-being.
New York: Academic Press; Elsevier Science, 2012. — 277 p. In the last few decades, scientists have discovered that far from being a time of neural silence, sleep is characterized by complex patterns of electrical, neurochemical, and metabolic activity in the brain. "Sleep and the Brain" presents some of the more dramatic developments in our understanding of brain activity in...
Philadelphia: Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins, 2009. — 345 p. This text/atlas is a unique source of practical information for clinicians who must interpret polysomnography tracings of the neonate, infant, child, and adult. Most atlases show just the images of the various findings. In the Second Edition of the Atlas of Polysomnography (formerly Atlas of Digital...
Academic Press, 2019. — 487 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-815373-4. This book provides an accessible yet comprehensive overview of the relationship between sleep and health at the individual, community and population levels, as well as a discussion of the implications for public health, public policy and interventions. Based on a firm foundation in many areas of sleep health research,...
Apple Academic Press, 2018. — 547 p. Written for sleep technologists, Clinical Atlas of Polysomnography provides basic information regarding normal sleep, sleep disorders, and electrophysiology that is outside of the scope of the AASM manual (AASM Manual for the Scoring of Sleep and Associated Events). It aims to act as a guide through the fundamental aspects of, for example,...
The Guilford Press, 2018. — 209 p. This practical manual presents an innovative modular treatment for adults and adolescents with a wide range of sleep and circadian rhythm problems, such as insomnia, daytime sleepiness, poor sleep quality, and irregular sleep-wake schedules. The treatment applies broadly to all individuals with sleep problems, including those with psychiatric...
Dorling Kindersley, 2020. — 144 p. — (A Little Book of Self Care) — ISBN: 9781465490421. Make excellent sleep a life-changing reality for you — now. New science has revealed the importance of sleep as one of the foundations of good health. Take control of your sleep with more than 40 proven strategies, based on a 360-degree approach to achieving excellent sleep. Find targeted...
Berlin: Springer, 1972. — 347 p. The sleep-waking cycle The role of monoamines and acetylcholine-containing neurons in the regulation of the sleep-waking cycle
Springer, 2019. — 260 p. This book examines 23 case examples of the most common comorbid presentations of sleep and psychiatric disturbances from a reader-friendly, digestible approach. All chapters are written and edited by the rare experts certified in both sleep and psychiatry. Every case details the clinical history, examination, results, diagnosis, clinical pearls and...
Humana Press, 2012. — 582 p. The book is a comprehensive, timely and up-to-date review of pediatric sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and offers a thorough focus on several key areas: namely, the normal development and maturation of the airway and breathing during sleep, the techniques that are in place for assessment of SDB in children, the clinical manifestations and...
Springer, 2017. — 213 p. This clinical casebook presents a comprehensive review of common sleep problems in adolescents in a concise, easy-to-read format. Each chapter thoroughly addresses a unique sleep disorder in teenagers through illustrative cases, reviews of relevant literature, and pearls of wisdom for both the practicing sleep specialist and other practitioners involved...
Informa Healthcare, 2011. — 164 p. — ISBN: 9780415450089. Written by experienced contributors from the renowned Mayo Clinic, the Atlas of Sleep and Sleep Medicine covers the history, humanities, and comparative biological aspects of sleep. This highly illustrated resource includes photographs, reproductions, graphics, segments of sleep studies, and clinical algorithms to aid...
6th edition. — Elsevier, 2017. — 1785 p. Normal Sleep and Its Variants Sleep Mechanisms and Phylogeny Physiology in Sleep Genetics and Genomic Basis of Sleep Chronobiology Pharmacology Psychobiology and Dreaming Impact, Presentation, and Diagnosis Legal Topics in Sleep Medicine Occupational Sleep Medicine Insomnia Neurologic Disorders Parasomnias Sleep Breathing Disorders...
Philadelphia: Saunders, 2009. — 380 [47] p. From Meir H. Kryger, MD, the editor of the definitive resource in sleep, Principles and Practice of Sleep Medicine, comes the Atlas of Clinical Sleep Medicine. This highly illustrated atlas provides you with an exceptional visual aid to the most comprehensive, authoritative, and up-to-date information for diagnosing and treating adult...
2nd edition. — Philadelphia: Saunders, 2013. — 556 p. Accurately diagnose and treat adult and pediatric sleep disorders with exceptional visual guidance from world-renowned sleep expert Dr. Meir H. Kryger. Atlas of Clinical Sleep Medicine is an easy-to-read, highly illustrated atlas that details the physiologic, clinical, morphologic, and investigational aspects of the full...
Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2015. — 1034 p. Now completely updated and reorganized to reflect the most recent Sleep Medicine board examination, the ICSD-3, and the revision to the AASM Scoring Manual, Kryger’s Sleep Medicine Review, 2nd Edition, provides authoritative guidance and cutting-edge information to help you prepare for the test and for clinical practice. This unique review...
5th edition. — Saunders, 2011. — 1757 p Principles and Practice of Sleep Medicine, 5th Edition delivers the comprehensive, dependable guidance you need to effectively diagnose and manage even the most challenging sleep disorders. Updates to genetics and circadian rhythms, occupational health, sleep in older people, memory and sleep, physical examination of the patient, comorbid...
ITexLi, 2022. — 173 p. — ISBN: 1839698217 9781839698217 1839698233 9781839698231. This book takes up the growing prevalence of sleep disorders affecting these processes and the panorama of pharmaceutical tools that have evolved for their medical care. Its wide-ranging discussion promises not only recent updates on their clinical management but a contemporary window into sleep’s...
Penguin Random House, 2019. — 256 p. — ISBN: 978-0-241-98444-4. From the brilliant psychoanalyst behind Strictly Bipolar and What is Madness, a short and fascinating guide to the history of human sleep - and why we can't seem to sleep any more One in four adults sleeps badly. Sleeping pill prescriptions have increased dramatically over the last three decades, as have the...
Wiley, 2006. — 1038 p. — ISBN: 978-0-471-68371-1 Written by contemporary experts from around the world, Sleep: A Comprehensive Handbook covers the entire field of sleep medicine. Taking a novel approach, the text features both syndrome- and patient-oriented coverage, making it ideally suited for both clinical use and academic study.Sleep: A Comprehensive Handbook begins with a...
Oxford University Press, 2008 — 720 p. Sleep Medicine is one of the fastest growing fields of medicine and of strong interest to neurologists, psychiatrists, psychologists, pulmonologists, otolaryngologists, and the technologists who perform sleep studies. Almost all of the major medical centers in the US now have centers for sleep disorders. In 2007, sleep medicine will become...
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022. — 353 p. The Oxford Handbook of Sleep Medicine provides a comprehensive, practical guide to clinicians of all backgrounds for the diagnosis and treatment of sleep disorders across clinical specialties. Sleep medicine is encountered in almost every field of medicine yet clinical training and practical guidance are often difficult to find....
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004. — 251 p. This new book presents the most detailed and comprehensive archive of normal and abnormal sleep patterns. Based on a landmark study supported by the National Institute on Aging, 772 subjects from a host of populations including men, women, and various age and ethnic groups, prepared detailed sleep diaries for a two-week period. The...
Oxford University Press, 2012. — 168 p. — (Very Short Introductions). Why do we need sleep? What is sleep? What happens when we don't get enough? This Very Short Introduction addresses the biological and psychological aspects of sleep, providing a basic understanding of what sleep is and how it is measured, a look at sleep through the human lifespan, and the causes and...
Oxford University Press, 2015. — 397 p. — ISBN 978–0–19–968395–6. Snoring and sleep-disordered breathing. Cases 1–24. Snoring and OSA: role of dental and ENT surgeons. Cases 25–34. Neurological sleep disorders. Cases 35–45. Insomnia and circadian rhythm disorders. Cases 46–55.
Springer, 2015. — 213 p. This concise text takes a symptom-based approach to evaluate and treat sleep disorders. Divided into two sections, this book emphasizes practical information in the patient history and physical, the latest screening techniques and common sleep disorders that either cause sleepiness, insomnia, or restless sleep. Chapters cover the epidemiology,...
Victoria, Australia: IP Communications, 2018. — 396 p. — ISBN10: 0995388709. Sleep is an activity that is exhibited by virtually all animal species, but our understanding of its true function remains unclear. What is better understood are the effects on a range of human and animal biological systems when sleep is degraded or curtailed. These effects are observed in the form of...
New York, USA, Infobase Publishing, 2009. — 131 p. — (Psychological Disorders). — ISBN: 1604130857. This is a concise guide to sleep which sheds light on how it functions and how it can be disrupted. It includes sleep disorders such as insomnia, snoring, sleep apnea, restless leg syndrome, and much more. What Is Sleep? Why We Need Sleep. Insomnia. Sleep Apnea. Movement...
Elsevier, 2014. — 415 p. The only sleep technology text written by experienced polysomnography educators, Polysomnography for the Sleep Technologist: Instrumentation, Monitoring, and Related Procedures covers the procedural knowledge you need to understand sleep studies. A sequential learning model systematically covers electronics, instrumentation, recording parameters, data...
Berlin: Springer, 2015. — 561 p. This book reviews current knowledge on the importance of sleep for brain function, from molecular mechanisms to behavioral output, with special emphasis on the question of how sleep and sleep loss ultimately affect cognition and mood. It provides an extensive overview of the latest insights in the role of sleep in regulating gene expression,...
University Of Chicago Press, 2017. — 176 p. — ISBN: 9780226387161. We often hear that humans spend one third of their lives sleeping — and most of us would up that fraction if we could. Whether we’re curling up for a brief lunchtime catnap, catching a doze on a sunny afternoon, or clocking our solid eight hours at night, sleeping is normally a reliable way to rest our heads and...
New York: Academic Press, 2017. — 256 p. Sleep and Neurologic Disease reviews how common neurologic illnesses, such as Parkinson’s Disease and Alzheimer’s dementia impact sleep. In addition, the book discusses how common primary sleep disorders influence neurologic diseases, such as the relationship between obstructive sleep apnea and stroke, as well as their association with...
Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2011. — 497 p. The second part of a two-part work in the Handbook of Clinical Neurology series on sleep disorders Contents: Foreword History of the Sleep Disorders Classification System Insomnia Due to Mental Disorder (327.02) Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Adult (327.23) Recurrent Hypersomnia (327.13) Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder, Shift Work Type (327.36)...
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. — 507 p. Pharmacological approaches to our understanding of sleep have been at the forefront of sleep research for many years. Traditional techniques have included the use of pharmacological agonists and antagonists, as well as transmitter-specific lesions. These have been enhanced by the introduction of molecular genetics and the...
Basel: Birkhäuser, 2007. — 628 p. This book focuses on the neuropsychopharmacology of serotonin and its role in sleep and wakefulness, presenting neurochemical, electrophysiological, and neuropharmacological approaches to understand the mechanisms of serotonin and related substances. Covering core and contemporary topics in the area, this volume is valuable for all researchers...
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. — 1694 p. From the ancients to the present day, the importance of sleep has seldom been disputed, but it has never had top billing in comparison to other components of healthy living. Now, however, it seems that the combined critical mass of research, the needs of the population, and the shifting weight. Of professional interest is pushing...
Springer, 2017. — 421 p. This book is both an exam guide to children´s sleep medicine and a practical manual for diagnosis and management of sleep disorders in children. An overview of the most frequent sleep disorders encountered in newborns, infants, children and adolescents is provided. This book discusses the main sleep disorders in detail, including insomnia, respiratory...
N.-Y.: Apple Academic Press, CRC Press, 2014. - 384 p. Providing a nuanced study of the connections between sleep, circadian rhythms, and metabolis, this informative book examines how circadian actions affect the liver and adipose tissue, the brain, and metabolism. This important book introduces the reader to circadian rhythms in the body and the external cues that set them,...
Chelsea House Publishers, 2006. — 106 p. Book from the Drugs The Straight Facts series. The Use and Abuse of Drugs David J. Triggle, Ph.D. What Is This Thing We Call Sleep? Sleep Disorders Over-the-Counter Sleep Aids Melatonin Over-the-Counter Stimulants Prescription Sleep Aids and Stimulants Other Drugs and Medications Further Reading and Websites
ITexLi, 2022. — 182 p. — ISBN: 1839692006 9781839692000 1839691999 9781839691997 1839692014 9781839692017. Serotonin is an ancient neurotransmitter system involved in various systems and functions in the body and plays an important role in health and disease. The present volume illustrates the broadness of the involvement of serotonergic activity in many processes, focusing...
New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. — 328 p. Formulate treatment plans with confidence when you consult Sleep Disorders in Neurology, a helpful overview of both common and rare neurological disorders that are frequently accompanied by significant sleep disturbances. This concise guide explains when to consult a sleep specialist in managing a particular sleep disorder and draws on...
Second Edition. — Wiley-Blackwell, 2018. — 355 p. — ISBN: 9781118777244. The acclaimed guide to quickly and confidently diagnosing and treating sleep disorders in neurological disease — now with more algorithms and tables The diagnosis and treatment of sleep disorders can be extremely challenging for physicians, especially when there is underlying neurological disease. In...
Humana Press, 2007. — 348 p. The book is a clinical text geared toward the practicing primary care physician. This is the first text in which evidence-based practice recommendations are presented, as available, based primarily on practice parameter papers developed by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Both physicians in training and those in practice can utilize this text...
2nd edition. — Springer, 2014. — 379 p. — ISBN: 978-1-4939-1184-4 Primary Care Sleep Medicine – A Practical Guide was among the first books to address sleep medicine for a primary care audience. It remains the primary text oriented to the primary care physician with an interest in sleep disorders medicine. Since this title published, there have been many changes in the sleep...
Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2016. — 506 p. Here is a unique resource that provides a comprehensive and highly readable summary of the basic concepts and clinical applications in sleep medicine, written for all professionals involved in health care. Sleep medicine encompasses an unusually board spectrum of contributions from biology, technology, and medicine. This volume summarizes...
Chichester: BMJ Books, 2013. — 74 p. A practical illustrated guide to sleep disorders which will give health professionals confidence in this complex area of diagnosis and management. It explains the differences between normal and abnormal sleep, and looks in depth at individual disorders such as sleep apnoea, insomnia, narcolepsy, restless legs syndrome and the parasomnias, as...
Springer, 2014. — 248 p. This volume on the Impact of Sleep and Sleep Disturbances on Obesity and Cancer continues the transdisciplinary approach of this series with chapters authored by the leading experts in this field, focused on the normal regulation of the restorative sleep associated processes across the lifespan, the major mechanisms of sleep and circadian rhythm...
Springer, 2011. — 143 p. Wakefulness is a necessary, active and periodic brain state, with a circadian and homeostatic regulation and precisely meshed with other states into the sleep-wakefulness cycle. This monograph first overviews the historical background and current understanding of the neuronal systems generating and/or maintaining the various phases of the...
Darien: American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2014. — 383 p. The recently released third edition of the International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD) is a fully revised version of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine's manual of sleep disorders nosology, published in cooperation with international sleep societies. It is the key reference work for the diagnosis of sleep...
New York: Springer, 2018. — 299 p. This book is designed to give clinicians a practical guide to the detection, assessment and treatment of sleep disorders in patients with psychiatric illness in order to better treat both their sleep disorder and their psychiatric disorder. In addition to providing a thorough introduction to the major sleep disorders, it offers clear guidance...
Cambridge University Press, 2013. — 399 p. The first comprehensive book on the subject, The Genetic Basis of Sleep and Sleep Disorders covers detailed reviews of the general principles of genetics and genetic techniques in the study of sleep and sleep disorders. The book contains sections on the genetics of circadian rhythms, of normal sleep and wake states and of sleep...
2nd edition. — Informa Healthcare, 2010. — 348 p. Physiologic basis of sleep Classification of sleep disorders Assessing the patient with a sleep disorder Diagnostic testing for sleep disorders Sleepiness and its causes Approach to the sleepy patient Narcolepsy and related conditions Sleep apnea syndromes Sleep in patients with respiratory diseases and respiratory failure...
New York: Academic Press, 2009. — 375 p. Sleep is the natural state of bodily rest, common to all mammals and birds and also seen in many reptiles, amphibians and fish. For most species, regular sleep is essential for survival, yet the specific purposes of sleep are still only partly clear and are the subject of intense research. This volume is comprised of the editors'...
Nova Science Publishers, 2022. — 671 p. — (KJ Lee Essential Medicine Series). — ISBN: 9781685072209. This textbook presents a succinct yet comprehensive overview of the current essential topics in sleep medicine. Each chapter, written by experts in the many fields that make up sleep medicine, provides a unique, multidisciplinary perspective on the diagnosis and management of...
Cambridge University Press, 2010. — 361 p. The first authoritative review on the parasomnias - disorders that cause abnormal behavior during sleep - this book contains many topics never before covered in detail. The behaviors associated with parasomnias may lead to injury of the patient or bed-partner, and may have forensic implications. These phenomena are common but often...
New York: Academic Press, 2011. — 352 p. — (Progress in Brain Research 193). Slow brain oscillations of sleep, resting state, and vigilance Slow oscillations of sleep: When, where, who, and why? Even slower: The when, where, who, and why of ISOs Electrophysiological correlates of sleep homeostasis in freely behaving rats Behavior and brain activity in waking and sleep Global...
2nd Edition. — Academic Press, 2018. — 224 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-810476-7. The Auditory System in Sleep, Second Edition presents a view of a sensory system working in a different state, that of the sleeping brain. This updated edition contains new chapters on topics such as implanted deaf patients and sleep and tinnitus treatments. It is written for basic auditory system and...
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012. — 286 p. Sleep Deprivation: Stimulant Medications and Cognition provides a review, synthesis and analysis of the scientific literature concerning stimulant medications and neurobehavioral performance, with an emphasis on critically evaluating the practical utility of these agents for maintaining cognitive performance and alertness in...
Nova Science Publishers, 2017. — 80 p. Sleep debt is a characteristic symptom of modern society, a society that provides services without interruption consumption over 24 hours with the help of teams undergo shift work, and encouraging individuals to use these services in unconventional times. Sleep loss can also be caused by neurological, psychiatric and medical disorders. The...
New York: Plural Publishing, Inc., 2010. — 449 p. In spite of the fact that over one third of all adults and children with sleep disorders present initially to an otolaryngologist for diagnosis and treatment, there is a paucity of available educational material written from and for the ENT perspective. This new book, featuring chapters from contributing experts in other related...
W. W. Norton & Co., 2021. — 336 p. A comprehensive, eye-opening exploration of what dreams are, where they come from, what they mean, and why we have them. Questions on the origins and meaning of dreams are as old as humankind and as confounding and exciting today as when nineteenth-century scientists first attempted to unravel them. Why do we dream? Do dreams hold...
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