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  • Book
    edited by Kristie Brandt, C.N.M., M.S.N., D.N.P. ; Bruce D. Perry, M.D., Ph. D. ; Stephen Seligman, D.M.H., Ed Tronick, Ph. D. ; foreword by T. Berry Brazelton, M.D.
    Summary: Drawing from their pioneering work on infant-parent mental health, the editors of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health: Core Concepts and Clinical Practice have assembled a comprehensive, clinically useful volume for health care providers who serve children and families from pregnancy through age 5 in their practices.

    Contents:
    Core concepts in infant-family and early childhood mental health / Kristie Brandt
    The neurosequential model of therapeutics (NMT) : application of a developmentally sensitive and neurobiology-informed approach to clinical problem solving in maltreated children / Bruce D. Perry
    Typical and a-typical development : peek-a-boo and blind selection / Ed Tronick
    Brazelton's neurodevelopmental and relational touchpoints & infant mental health / John Hornstein
    The neurorelational framework (NRF) in infant and early childhood mental health / Connie Lillas
    Attachment theory : implications for young children and their parents / Carol George
    Psychoanalytic & psychodynamic theory : play therapy for young children / Alexandra Murray Harrison
    Interpersonal neurobiology, mindsight, and integration : the mind, relationships & the brain / Benjamin W. Nelson, Suzanne C. Parker, Daniel J. Siegel
    Basics of counseling in infant-parent and early childhood mental health / Barbara Stroud, Michael M. Morgan
    Behavioral epigenetics and the developmental origins of child mental health disorders / Barry M. Lester, Carmen J. Marsit, Cailey Bromer
    D-C: 0-3R : a diagnostic schema for infants and young children and their families / Cherise Northcutt, Barbara McCarroll
    Fussy babies : early challenges in regulation, impact on the dyad and family, and longer-term implications / Linda Gilkerson, Larry Gray
    The developmental & dyadic implications of challenges with sensory processing, physical functioning, and sensory based self-regulation / Marie E. Anzalone, Margaret Ritchey
    Autism spectrum disorders : the importance of parent-child relationships / Mary Beth Steinfeld, Ruby Moye Salazar
    Touch in parent-infant mental health : arousal, regulation, and relationships / Mark Ludwig, Tiffany Field
    Developmental psychopathology : core principles and implications for child mental health / Stephen P. Hinshaw, Cassandra L. Joubert
    The basics of video intervention therapy (VIT) and its use with psychiatrically disturbed parents / George Downing, Susanne Wortmann-Fleischer, Regina von Einsiedel, Wolfgang Jordan, Corinna Reck
    Evidence-based treatments and evidence-based practices in the infant-parent mental health field / Connie Lillas, Joshua Feder, James Diel, Kristie Brandt
    Transforming clinical practice through reflection work / Kristie Brandt
    The trilogy of attachment, intersubjectivity & mentalization within the experience of the child, the parent & the provider / Stephen Seligman.
    Digital Access PsychiatryOnline 2014
  • Article
    Cotes PM, Crow TJ, Johnstone EC, Bartlett W, Bourne RC.
    Psychol Med. 1978 Nov;8(4):657-65.
    Changes in levels of prolactin, growth hormone, luteinizing hormone, and follicle stimulating hormone in serum, and testosterone in plasma, have been studied in 38 patients with acute schizophrenic illnesses in a 4-week double-blind comparison of the 2 isomers of flupenthixol and placebo. Only prolactin showed changes which could be related either to changes in clinical state or to the effects of medication. Prolactin levels increased during treatment with the therapeutically active alpha-isomer of flupenthixol but were unchanged with the inactive beta-isomer and placebo. Although there was a significant relationship between prolactin level and antipsychotic effect in patients on alpha-flupenthixol, in the individual case prolactin level was not a strong predictor of therapeutic response; and in patients on inactive medication changes in prolactin level could not be related to sympton change. There was a time lag of at least 2 weeks between the increase in prolactin secretion in patients on alpha-flupenthixol and the therapeutic effect attributable to medication. This delay suggests that if the antipsychotic effect is dependent upon dopamine receptor blockade it is not a direct consequence of this action. Perhaps dopamine receptor blockade permits other, and slower, changes to take place and it is these changes, rather than dopamine receptor blockade itself, which are reflected in clinical improvement.
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