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- Book[edited by] Joseph S. Kass, Eli M. Mizrahi.Contents:
1. Clinical neuroscience
2. Clinical neuroanatomy
3. Approach to the patient with neurologic disease
4. Myopathies
5. Neuromuscular junction diseases
6. Peripheral neuropathies and motor neuron diseases
7. Radiculopathy and degenerative spine disease
8. Myelopathies
9. Brain stem disease
10. Cerebellar disease
11. Basal ganglia disorders
12. movement disorders
13. Autonomic nervous system
14. Demyelinating and autoimmune diseases
15. Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment
16. Non-Alzheimer's dementias
17. Neuropsychiatry and behavioral neurology
18. Cerebrovascular disease
19. Neurocritical care
20. Neuro-oncology
21. Headaches
22. Seizures and epilepsy
23. Sleep disorders
24. Neurologic complications of systemic disease
25. Infectious diseases of the nervous system
26. Neurogenetic disorders
27. Pain processing and modulation
28. Pediatric neurology
29. Psychiatry in neurology
30. Neuro-otology
31. Electroencephalography
32. Electromyography
33. Neuropathology.Digital Access ClinicalKey 2017 - ArticleEl-Guebaly N, Offord DR.Am J Psychiatry. 1977 Apr;134(4):357-65.In their review of the literature on the effects of parental alcoholism on the offspring of alcoholics, the authors focus on sample collection, criteria used for the diagnosis of parental alcoholism, and definitions of "emotional disturbances." Studies are grouped according to age of offspring; within each age group, the various approaches to the issue are described. The authors suggest a need for more carefully controlled studies using blind data collection and clear operational definitions. In addition, the "risk" status of offspring of alcoholics should be compared to that of children whose parents have other types of serious psychiatric disturbance. Although the literature has focused on the "casualties," the authors note that much could be learned from studies of the "successes"--those children who do not seem to be at increased risk for pychosocial illness despite the alcoholism of their parents.