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Epilepsy and Memory [Hardback]

Edited by (Visiting Professor of Neuropsychology, University College London, UK), Edited by (Professor, Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill), Edited by (Professor of Cognitive and Behavioural Neurology, Peninsula Medical School, University of Exeter, UK)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 480 pages, height x width x depth: 246x182x29 mm, weight: 1138 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jun-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199580286
  • ISBN-13: 9780199580286
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 181,52 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 480 pages, height x width x depth: 246x182x29 mm, weight: 1138 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jun-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199580286
  • ISBN-13: 9780199580286
Epilepsy is the most common potentially serious disorder of the brain, and these patients often suffer from memory problems. There are a number of reasons for this: seizures can directly affect the brain in ways that disturb memory; epilepsy often results from trouble in brain regions closely linked to memory; the treatment of epilepsy can affect memory; epilepsy can cause psychological problems, like depression, which interfere with memory. The study of epilepsy and the study of human memoryare interwoven.

Epilepsy and Memory comprehensively reviews all aspects of the relationship between this common and potentially serious neurological disorder and memory, one of the core functions of the human mind. The authors, acknowledged experts in their fields, review the history of the subject, the clinical features of memory disorder in epilepsy, neuropsychological, neuroradiological, neuropathological and electrophysiological findings, the roles of anticonvulsant side effects and psychiatric disorder, and the scope for memory support and rehabilitation. The study of patients with epilepsy has revealed much about the workings of memory, yet there has been no recent review of this fertile field of research. This book fills this gap and is a valuable new addition to the brain sciences literature. It will be of wide interest to clinicians and basic researchers in the brain sciences.

Recenzijas

This fascinating volume seeks to review what is known about the interrelationships of memory and epilepsy, summarising both clinical and laboratory studies. * ACNR, Dec 2012 *

Contributors ix
Abbreviations xiii
1 Introduction
1(18)
Part 1 History
2 Memory before and after H.M.: an impressionistic historical perspective
19(32)
Morris Moscovitch
3 Memory disorders and epilepsy during the nineteenth century
51(14)
German E. Berrios
Part 2 Overviews of memory and epilepsy
4 Interictal memory disturbance: a comparative phenomenology and epidemiology of memory impairment in epilepsies
65(18)
Hennric Jokeit
Simone Bosshardt
Victoria Reed
5 Long-term follow-up of memory in patients with epilepsy
83(34)
Elisabeth Engman
Kristina Malmgren
6 Memory in children with epilepsy
102
Mary Lou Smith
Esther Direnfeld
Part 3 Ictal and interictal memory phenomena
7 Deja experiences in epilepsy: contributions from memory research
117(22)
Nathan A. Illman
Chris J.A. Moulin
Akira R. O'Connor
Patrick Chauvel
8 The syndrome of transient epileptic amnesia
139(21)
Adam Zeman
Chris Butler
John Hodges
Narinder Kapur
9 Effects of epileptiform EEG discharges on cognitive function
160(17)
Albert P. Aldenkamp
Part 4 Assessment
10 Neuropsychological assessment of memory in patients with epilepsy
177(12)
Jelena Djordjevic
Marilyn Jones-Gotman
11 Memory assessment in intracarotid anaesthetic procedures: history and current status
189(20)
Gail L. Risse
12 Epilepsy and the study of spatial memory using virtual reality
209(18)
Veronique D. Bohbot
Louisa Dahmani
Part 5 Remote memory and psychiatric disorders
13 Remote memory and temporal lobe epilepsy
227(17)
Mary Pat McAndrews
14 Electroconvulsive therapy for depression and autobiographical memory
244(15)
Hedvig Soderlund
Alexander Percy
Brian Levine
15 Psychiatric aspects of memory disorders in epilepsy
259(26)
Laura H. Goldstein
Narinder Kapur
Part 6 Imaging and event-related potentials (ERPs)
16 Structural imaging and neuropathological correlates of memory in epilepsy
285(21)
Mark Richardson
17 Functional imaging of memory in epilepsy
306(17)
Lars Frings
Kathrin Wagner
18 Electrophysiological studies of memory in epilepsy
323(16)
Thomas Grunwald
Manila Vannucci
Part 7 Intracranial stimulation and recording
19 Memory and epilepsy in nonhuman animals
339(19)
Pierre-Pascal J. Lenck-Santini
Gregory L. Holmes
20 Hippocampal electrical stimulation and localisation of long-term episodic memory
358(13)
Robin G. Morris
Steven G. Coleshill
Maria E. Lacruz
Antonio Valentin
Gonzalo Alarcon
21 Interrelationships between epilepsy, sleep, and memory
371(11)
Nikolai Axmacher
22 Mapping memories in the medial temporal lobe: contributions from single-neuron recordings in patients with epilepsy
382(15)
Indre V. Viskontas
Part 8 Management and outcome
23 Anticonvulsants and memory
397(14)
Joanne Taylor
Gus A. Baker
24 Effects of amygdalohippocampectomy versus corticoamygdalohippocampectomy on memory and nonmemory cognitive functions
411(14)
Sarah J. Banks
Marilyn Jones-Gotman
25 Memory rehabilitation for people with epilepsy
425(16)
Pam Thompson
Loes Koorenhof
Narinder Kapur
Author index 441(12)
Subject index 453
Adam trained in Medicine at Oxford University Medical School, after a first degree in Philosophy and Psychology, and in Neurology in Oxford, at The National Hospital for Neurology in Queen Square, London, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge and The Norfolk and Norwich Hospital. He moved to Edinburgh in 1996, as a Consultant and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences. Between February 2003 and August 2004 he was supported by a Health Foundation Mid-Career Award with the aim of 'building bridges between neurology, psychology and psychiatry'. Adam's specialised clinical work is in cognitive and behavioural neurology, including neurological disorders of sleep. His research interests include amnesia associated with epilepsy, disorders of visual imagery and the neuropsychiatric consequences of cerebellar disease. Adam has an active background interest in the science and philosophy of consciousness, publishing a wide-ranging review of the field in Brain (2001;124:1263-1289).

Narinder trained as a neuropsychologist in Belfast, Boston and London. He was Head of Neuropsychology at the Wessex Neurological Centre, Southampton for 23 years, and then Head of Neuropsychology at Addenbrooke's Hospital for 7 years.

Marilyn earned a BA in psychology at the University of California in 1970, followed by an MA in Physiological Psychology at McGill University in 1971 and a PhD at McGill in 1975. Her specialty in graduate school was in neuropsychology, which I have practiced in clinical work and in research and teaching throughout my career. She is currently Professor in McGill's Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, with an associate appointment in the Psychology Department. Her work has focused in part on various aspects of cognition, especially learning and memory, approached via functional neuroimaging and studies of patients with brain lesions. Marilyn also has developed a number of neuropsychological tests, several of which have been adopted by other neuropsychologists around the world.