
Psychopharmacology: Drugs, the Brain, and Behavior
by Meyer, Jerrold S.; Quenzer, Linda F.Buy Used
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Summary
*A new and timely discussion of emerging substances of abuse such as Salvia divinorum, "spice" or "K2," and "bath salts"
*Presentation of key biological concepts such as epigenetics to help students understand current ideas about how mental illnesses arise and how drugs act on the brain to treat these illnesses
*Two new chapters that provide detailed information on various neurodegenerative disorders and the effects of neurotoxicants and endocrine disruptors on brain function and behavior
*A student Companion Website that contains outlines, flashcards and key terms, select animations, and web boxes for further exploration
*An Instructor's Resource Library that contains all textbook figures and tables, lecture PowerPoints, and a test bank.
Student engagement with the material is fostered by opening each chapter with a relevant vignette and by providing breakout boxes presenting novel and, in some cases, controversial topics for special discussion. Box themes include History of Psychopharmacology, Pharmacology in Action, Clinical Applications, and The Cutting Edge. The book is lavishly illustrated with full-color photographs and line art depicting important concepts and experimental data.
Psychopharmacology: Drugs, the Brain, and Behavior, Second Edition is appropriate for undergraduate or beginning level graduate courses in psychopharmacology or drugs and behavior that emphasize relationships between the behavioral effects of psychoactive drugs and their mechanisms of action.
RESOURCES
For Students
New for the Second Edition, the Psychopharmacology Companion Website includes a variety of resources to help students learn and review the material presented in the textbook, and to expand the coverage of the textbook. The site includes the following:
*Chapter Outlines
*Animations: Detailed, narrated animations of some of the key complex processes described in the textbook
*Web Boxes presenting novel or cutting-edge topics for special discussion
*Web Links: A collection of suggested websites related to each chapter
*Flashcards & Key Terms: A great way for students to learn and review the key terminology introduced in each chapter
For Instructors
Available to qualified adopters of the textbook, Psychopharmacology's Instructor's Resource Library provides instructors with a range of resources to help them prepare their lectures and assess their students. The IRL includes the following:
*Textbook Figures & Tables: All of the figures (art and photos) and tables from the textbook are provided both as high-resolution and low-resolution JPEG images.
*PowerPoint Presentations: Two presentations are provided for each chapter of the textbook:
-All figures and tables from the chapter, ready to insert into custom presentations
-A complete lecture presentation that includes comprehensive lecture notes and selected figures
*Test Bank (see below for details)
*Computerized Test Bank
Included in the Instructor's Resource Library, the Psychopharmacology Test Bank includes 50 test questions per chapter, consisting of approximately forty multiple-choice, and ten short-answer. The questions have been designed to provide instructors with a good selection of factual and conceptual questions, at a range of difficulty levels. The test bank is provided as Microsoft Word files.
In addition to the Microsoft Word version of the Test Bank, all questions are available in Wimba's Diploma test-creation software (software included). Diploma makes it easy to create quizzes and exams using any combination of publisher-provided questions and your own questions, and to print or publish your exams for online use.
Author Biography
Jerrold S. Meyer is Professor Emeritus of Psychology and former Director of the interdepartmental Neuroscience and Behavior Program at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He did his graduate work under Dr. Robert Bowman at the University of Wisconsin, receiving his Ph.D. in 1974, and he was a postdoctoral fellow with Dr. Bruce McEwen at Rockefeller University and with Dr. William Boggan at the Medical University of South Carolina. He is the author or coauthor of over 120 articles and chapters in the fields of neuropharmacology and neuroendocrinology, and coauthored the first edition of the present text with Linda Quenzer as well as Principles of Neuropsychopharmacology (1997) with Robert Feldman and Linda Quenzer. Dr. Meyer is a member of the Board of Directors of the International Drug Abuse Research Society and the Editorial Board of the journal Neurotoxicology and Teratology. He is a past President of the Neurobehavioral Teratology Society. His current research, funded by the National Institutes of Health, focuses on stress and psychopathology in both humans and animal models. He has also recently conducted numerous studies on the neurotoxic and behavioral effects of the abused drug MDMA ("ecstasy").
Linda F. Quenzer is Adjunct Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Hartford. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in 1974 with Dr. Robert S. Feldman and she was an NIMH postdoctoral fellow in the Laboratory of Preclinical Pharmacology with Dr. Norton Neff. During her appointment in the Departments of Pharmacology and Psychiatry at the University of Connecticut Medical School, she received a Career Development Award from the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association Foundation. Dr. Quenzer has extensive teaching experience in the areas of psychobiology and neuropsychopharmacology at the undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate levels. Her previous collaborations with Sinauer Associates include Fundamentals of Neuropsychopharmacology (1984, with Robert Feldman) and Principles of Neuropsychopharmacology (1997, with Robert Feldman and Jerrold Meyer). Her current interests concern the role of the HPA axis, hippocampal atrophy, and neurogenesis in psychiatric disorders.
Table of Contents
CHAPTERS 1-4 provide extensive foundation materials, including the basic principles of pharmacology, neurophysiology and neuroanatomy, synaptic transmission, and methods in psychopharmacology.
1. Principles of Pharmacology
*New section on therapeutic drug monitoring
*New material on pharmacogenetics/personalized medicine
*Expanded section on transdermal drug delivery and viral vectors for gene therapy
2. Structure and Function of the Nervous System
*New section on epigenetics
*Introductory material on neurotrophic factors
*New section on comparing mammalian brains
*New box on stem cells
*New box on the HPA axis
3. Chemical Signaling by Neurotransmitters and Hormones
*New opening vignette on the discovery of chemical transmission in the brain
*Discussion of â$e volumeâ$e vs. â$e wiringâ$e transmission
*New section on drug-induced synaptic plasticity
*New box on sex hormones and drug abuse
4. Methods of Research in Psychopharmacology
*Revised order to introduce behavioral methods before neurobiological methods
*Expanded section on translational research
*New material on pharmacological MRI
*New boxes showing how drug discrimination and transgenic mouse models are used in research
CHAPTERS 5â$e"8 describe the basic biochemistry, anatomy, and functional contributions of key neurotransmitter systems.
5. Catecholamines
*New opening vignette on the use of stimulant drugs as study aids
*New box on genetic mutations in humans that interfere with dopamine synthesis
*Expanded coverage of the behavioral functions of the noradrenergic system
6. Serotonin
*New opening vignette describing a case report of the â$e serotonin syndromeâ$e
*New box on â$e ecstasyâ$e as a recreational drug, neurotoxin, and potential medication
*Discussion of the phenotypic characteristics of serotonin transporter knockout mice and of transgenic mice lacking central serotonergic neurons
*Expanded coverage of serotonin receptors and their functions
*New box on the role of serotonin in aggressive behavior
7. Acetylcholine
*New opening vignette describing the discovery and subsequent study of curare
*Expanded coverage of cholinergic pathways, receptors, and physiological functions
*New box on the role of acetylcholine in cognition
8. Glutamate and GABA
*Expanded coverage of vesicular and plasma membrane glutamate transporters
*Discussion of the potential therapeutic use of metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists in treating schizophrenia
*Discussion of ampakines as cognitive enhancers
*Updated box on long-term potentiation
*New box on the involvement of GABA in epilepsy
CHAPTERS 9â$e"17 summarize the main features of addiction and cover all major abused drugs from the standpoint of prevalence of use, subjective effects, mechanisms of action, and addictive potential.
9. Drug Abuse and Addiction
*Completely reorganized with better integration of the various factors that contribute to addiction
*Coverage of the new DSM-5 criteria for substance use disorder
*New boxes discussing behavioral (non-drug) addictions and the role of dopamine in reward
*Expanded and updated coverage of addiction neurobiology
10. Alcohol
*Expanded section on fetal alcohol syndrome
*New discussion of extrasynaptic GABA receptors
*New section on the role of stress and alcohol consumption
*New material on alcoholism treatments
*New box on gender differences in the effects of alcohol
*New Web Box on Alcoholics Anonymous
11. The Opioids
*New material on nociceptin/orphanin FQ and its receptor
*New section on the role of opioids in other forms of pain control: acupuncture, dual inhibition of peptidases, and gene therapy
*New section on the use of acupuncture for opiate withdrawal
*New material on the use of buprenorphine maintenance and vaccines for addiction treatment
*New box on oxycontin
12. Psychomotor Stimulants: Cocaine and the Amphetamines
*New box on the relative reinforcing efficacy of cocaine vs. alternative reinforcers
*Updated coverage of the mechanisms of cocaine action
*New information on animal models of escalated cocaine self-administration
*Updated and expanded coverage of the development of cocaine addiction and of neuroimaging studies of cocaine users
*New coverage of synthetic cathinone derivatives marketed as â$e bath saltsâ$e
13. Nicotine and Caffeine
*New opening vignette on the discovery of tobacco by Columbus
*Updated discussion of the role of nicotine vs. conditioning factors in the subjective effects of smoking
*Updated coverage of the cognitive effects of nicotine, the mechanisms of nicotine reinforcement, and nicotine tolerance
*New box on the progression from occasional to regular smoking, including the Hooked on Nicotine Checklist developed to assess the early stages of nicotine dependence
*New box on the health risks of caffeine-containing energy drinks
14. Marijuana and the Cannabinoids
*Updated coverage of cannabinoid receptors
*New information on the behavioral and physiological functions of the endocannabinoid system
*Updated discussion of the behavioral and health-related effects of acute and chronic cannabis use
*New box on the relationship between early heavy marijuana use and later risk for developing psychosis
*New information on designer cannabinoids marketed as â$e K2â$e or â$e Spiceâ$e
15. Hallucinogens, PCP, and Ketamine
*New coverage of Salvia divinorum including subjective effects and mechanism of action
*New information on instruments like the Altered States of Consciousness rating scale used to study the subjective effects of hallucinogenic substances
*Updated information on the mechanisms underlying hallucinogenesis
*Expanded discussion of the adverse effects of repeated PCP or ketamine exposure
*New information on potential therapeutic applications of ketamine
16. Inhalants, GHB, and Anabolicâ$e"Androgenic Steroids
*Updated coverage of the effects of acute and chronic inhalant use
*New information on the health risks of inhalants, including a proposed fetal solvent syndrome to describe craniofacial anomalies seen in infants exposed to inhalants prenatally
*Expanded and updated coverage of the mechanisms of action of GHB, GHB abuse, and the therapeutic use of GHB
*Updated information on anabolic steroid use by amateur and professional athletes
*Expanded and updated coverage of the mechanism of anabolic steroid action on muscle growth and the health risks of anabolic steroid use
NEW CHAPTER!
17. Environmental Neurotoxicants and Endocrine Disruptors
CHAPTERS 18â$e"21 cover psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders, presenting symptoms, proposed etiology, and therapeutic approaches (especially pharmacotherapies) for each.
18. Anxiety Disorders: Sedative-Hypnotic and Anxiolytic Drugs
*Greatly expanded section on the neurobiology of anxiety
*Enhanced section on the role of catecholamines, GABA, and serotonin in anxiety
*New section on the interaction of genetics and the environment in determining anxiety
*New section on the role of stress-induced epigenetic changes in anxiety disorders
*New material on gender differences in the response to stress
*New Web Box on new therapeutic targets
19. Affective Disorders: Antidepressants and Mood Stabilizers
*Expanded section on animal models
*Expanded discussion of the role of antidepressant-induced enhancement of neurogenesis
*New material on tryptophan depletion challenge and polymorphisms of the serotonin transporter
*Expanded section on third-generation antidepressants: ketamine, galanin, and agomelatine
*Expanded and updated material on valproate and carbamazepine
20. Schizophrenia: Antipsychotic Drugs
*Greater emphasis on cognitive dysfunction throughout
*Enhanced section on the role of genetics
*Further development of the hypoglutamate model
*Expanded section on second-generation therapeutics
*New section on efforts to treat the cognitive symptoms
*New box on epigenetic changes and the risk for schizophrenia
*New box on a neurodevelopmental animal model
NEW CHAPTER!
21. Neurodegenerative Diseases
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