Description

Book Synopsis

While recognizing the multidisciplinary nature of pain management, the Clinical Manual of Pain Management in Psychiatry focuses on the role of mental health practitioners in evaluation and assessment, pharmacological management, psychotherapeutic interventions, and comprehensive treatment planning. It balances theoretical foundations of pain pathophysiology with applied clinical information, providing guidelines to psychiatric differential diagnosis of pain states and psychiatric comorbidities associated with pain and integrating diagnostic and treatment approaches. Because proper treatment requires understanding the whole person, the book views the patient from biological, psychological, and social perspectives. It stresses the importance of examining psychological variables that can limit outcomes and even preclude aggressive interventional approaches. The manual also includes considerations pertinent to the elderly, children, and cultural groups.

This manual expands on the author's previous Concise Guide to Pain Management for Psychiatrists to reflect significant advances in the field of pain medicine. It updates trends in treatment approaches along with our understanding of chronic pain conditions, and presents new knowledge of the biological substrates underlying both pain and psychiatric comorbidities. The manual features particularly extensive revisions regarding the use of psychiatric and other adjunctive medications in pain management, including expanded discussion of long-term adverse effects, dependence, and pseudoaddictive behaviors involving opiates and weak analgesics. It also delineates the use of adjunctive treatments, including evolving data on the use of antidepressants and related medications for patients with chronic pain. Among the its practical benefits, the book
• Features updated coverage of common psychiatric comorbidities such as depression, anxiety, and personality disorders
• Addresses common pain disorders ranging from headache and back pain to pain related to cancer and HIV
• Includes an extensively revised chapter on pharmacology, familiarizing readers with the range of pain medications and providing information on dosages and side effects
• Fully discusses psychotherapeutic approaches, plus adjunctive interventions such as biofeedback and hypnosis
• Covers special techniques such as acupuncture and regional neural blockade
• Offers updated advice on emerging forensic issues, from disability claims to controlled substance diversion

With pain management issues so common in daily practice, this handy portable guide is designed for quick reference, features numerous tables and illustrations, and is easily understandable by less experienced clinicians or non-pain specialists. While written expressly for busy psychiatrists, it is also useful to psychologists, social workers, and other physicians.



Table of Contents

List of Tables
List of Figures
Preface
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Sensory Pathways of Pain and Acute Versus Chronic Pain
Chapter 3. Evaluation of the Pain Patient
Chapter 4. Common Psychiatric Comorbidities and Psychiatric Differential Diagnosis of the Pain Patient
Chapter 5. Pharmacology of Pain
Chapter 6. Psychotherapy
Chapter 7. Special Techniques in Pain Management
Chapter 8. Common Pain Disorders
Chapter 9. Special Populations
Chapter 10. Forensic Issues Pertaining to Pain
Index

Clinical Manual of Pain Management in Psychiatry

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A Paperback by Raphael J. Leo

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    View other formats and editions of Clinical Manual of Pain Management in Psychiatry by Raphael J. Leo

    Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
    Publication Date: 13/10/2007
    ISBN13: 9781585622757, 978-1585622757
    ISBN10: 1585622753

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    While recognizing the multidisciplinary nature of pain management, the Clinical Manual of Pain Management in Psychiatry focuses on the role of mental health practitioners in evaluation and assessment, pharmacological management, psychotherapeutic interventions, and comprehensive treatment planning. It balances theoretical foundations of pain pathophysiology with applied clinical information, providing guidelines to psychiatric differential diagnosis of pain states and psychiatric comorbidities associated with pain and integrating diagnostic and treatment approaches. Because proper treatment requires understanding the whole person, the book views the patient from biological, psychological, and social perspectives. It stresses the importance of examining psychological variables that can limit outcomes and even preclude aggressive interventional approaches. The manual also includes considerations pertinent to the elderly, children, and cultural groups.

    This manual expands on the author's previous Concise Guide to Pain Management for Psychiatrists to reflect significant advances in the field of pain medicine. It updates trends in treatment approaches along with our understanding of chronic pain conditions, and presents new knowledge of the biological substrates underlying both pain and psychiatric comorbidities. The manual features particularly extensive revisions regarding the use of psychiatric and other adjunctive medications in pain management, including expanded discussion of long-term adverse effects, dependence, and pseudoaddictive behaviors involving opiates and weak analgesics. It also delineates the use of adjunctive treatments, including evolving data on the use of antidepressants and related medications for patients with chronic pain. Among the its practical benefits, the book
    • Features updated coverage of common psychiatric comorbidities such as depression, anxiety, and personality disorders
    • Addresses common pain disorders ranging from headache and back pain to pain related to cancer and HIV
    • Includes an extensively revised chapter on pharmacology, familiarizing readers with the range of pain medications and providing information on dosages and side effects
    • Fully discusses psychotherapeutic approaches, plus adjunctive interventions such as biofeedback and hypnosis
    • Covers special techniques such as acupuncture and regional neural blockade
    • Offers updated advice on emerging forensic issues, from disability claims to controlled substance diversion

    With pain management issues so common in daily practice, this handy portable guide is designed for quick reference, features numerous tables and illustrations, and is easily understandable by less experienced clinicians or non-pain specialists. While written expressly for busy psychiatrists, it is also useful to psychologists, social workers, and other physicians.



    Table of Contents

    List of Tables
    List of Figures
    Preface
    Chapter 1. Introduction
    Chapter 2. Sensory Pathways of Pain and Acute Versus Chronic Pain
    Chapter 3. Evaluation of the Pain Patient
    Chapter 4. Common Psychiatric Comorbidities and Psychiatric Differential Diagnosis of the Pain Patient
    Chapter 5. Pharmacology of Pain
    Chapter 6. Psychotherapy
    Chapter 7. Special Techniques in Pain Management
    Chapter 8. Common Pain Disorders
    Chapter 9. Special Populations
    Chapter 10. Forensic Issues Pertaining to Pain
    Index

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