Bővebb ismertető
This Guide is intended to complement Stahl's Essential Psychopharmacology. Slahl's Essential Psychopharmacology emphasizes mechanisms of action and how psychotropic drugs work upon receptors and enzymes in the brain. This guide gives practical information on how to use these drugs in clinical practice. It would be impossible to include all available information about any drug in a single work, and no attempt is made here to be comprehensive. The purpose of this guide is instead to integrate the art of clinical practice with the science of psychopharmacology. That means including only essential facts in order to keep things short. Unfortunately that alsó means excluding less critical facts as well as extraneous information, which may nevertheless be useful to the reader but would make the book too long and dilute the most important information. In deciding what to include and what to omit, the author has drawn upon common sense and 30 years of clinical experience with patients. He has alsó consulted with many experienced clinicians and analyzed the evidence from controlled clinical trials and regulatory filings with government agencies. In order to meet the needs of the clinician and to facilitate future updates of this Guide, the opinions of readers are sincerely solicited. Feedback can be emailed to
[email protected]. Specifically, are the best and most essential psychotropic drugs included here? Do you find any factual errors? Are there agreements or disagreements with any of the opinions expressed here? Are there suggestions for any additional tips or pearls for future editions? Any and all suggestions and comments are welcomed. All of the selected drugs are presented in the same design formát in order to facilitate rapid access to information. Specifically, each drug is broken down into five sections, each designated by a unique color background: therapeutics, side effects, dosing and use, special populations, and the art of psychopharmacology, followed by key references. Therapeutics covers the brand names in major countries; the class of drug; what it is commonly prescribed and approved for by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA); how the drug works; how long it takes to work; what to do if it works or if it doesn't work; the best augmenting combinations for partial response or treatment resistance; and the tests (if any) that are required. Side effects explains how the drug causes side effects; gives a list of notable, lifethreatening, or dangerous side effects; gives a specific rating for weight gain or sedation, and advice about how to handlé side effects, including best augmenting agents for side effects. Dosing and use gives the usual dosing rangé; dosage forms; how to dose and dosing tips; symptoms of overdose; long-term use; if habit forming, how to stop; pharmacokinetics; drug interactions; when not to use; and other warnings or precautions. Special populations gives specific information about any possible renal, hepatic, and cardiac impairments, and any precautions to be taken for treating the elderly, children, adolescents, and pregnant and breast-feeding women. The art of psychopharmacology gives the author's opinions on issues such as the potential advantages and disadvantages of any one drug, the primary target symptoms, and clinical pearls to get the best out of a drug.