Suppressing the Mind [electronic resource] : Anesthetic Modulation of Memory and Consciousness / edited by Anthony Hudetz, Robert Pearce.

Por: Hudetz, Anthony [editor.]Colaborador(es): Pearce, Robert [editor.]Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Contemporary Clinical NeuroscienceEditor: Totowa, NJ : Humana Press, 2010Descripción: X, 252p. 38 illus., 19 illus. in color. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9781607614623Trabajos contenidos: SpringerLink (Online service)Tema(s): Medicine | Human physiology | Neurosciences | Anesthesiology | Neurology | Medicine & Public Health | Anesthesiology | Neurosciences | Human Physiology | NeurologyFormatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 617.96 Clasificación LoC:RD78.3-87.3Recursos en línea: de clik aquí para ver el libro electrónico
Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: By suppressing memory and consciousness - two components of the mind - anesthetics provide great relief to surgical patients and elicit wonder in clinicians and scientists. To-date we do not fully understand the mechanisms by which these effects are achieved. However, with recent advances in investigational technologies, ranging from molecular modeling and genetic manipulation to noninvasive functional brain imaging and computational approaches, substantial progress toward this goal has been made during the last decade. Suppressing the Mind is a multidisciplinary collection of original results and authoritative overviews of the current state of knowledge of the problem written by investigators who are internationally known for their significant contribution to our current understanding of the mechanism of anesthesia. It attempts to bridge molecular, cellular, integrative and systems-level actions of anesthetics with respect to their effects on consciousness and memory. Through a better understanding of how anesthetics work, we hope to also uncover the neurobiological bases of some of the deepest mysteries of the human mind; how it self-reflectively knows, perceives and remembers. This book should appeal to anesthesiologists, neurologists, psychologists, neuroscientists -- essentially anyone interested in anesthesia, consciousness, or memory. It provides insight into the current state of knowledge, and a perspective for future treatments of the subject as guided by novel hypotheses.
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Molecular Targets of General Anesthetics in the Nervous System -- A Neurochemical Perspective on States of Consciousness -- Anesthetic Modulation of Auditory Perception: Linking Cellular, Circuit, and Behavioral Effects -- Cortical Disintegration Mechanism of Anesthetic-Induced Unconsciousness -- Anesthesia and the Thalamocortical System -- Anesthesia-Induced State Transitions in Neuronal Populations -- Anesthesia Awareness: When the Mind Is Not Suppressed -- Loss of Recall and the Hippocampal Circuit Effects Produced by Anesthetics -- Modulation of the Hippocampal ?-Rhythm as a Mechanism for Anesthetic-Induced Amnesia -- Propofol Amnesia What is Going on in the Brain?.

By suppressing memory and consciousness - two components of the mind - anesthetics provide great relief to surgical patients and elicit wonder in clinicians and scientists. To-date we do not fully understand the mechanisms by which these effects are achieved. However, with recent advances in investigational technologies, ranging from molecular modeling and genetic manipulation to noninvasive functional brain imaging and computational approaches, substantial progress toward this goal has been made during the last decade. Suppressing the Mind is a multidisciplinary collection of original results and authoritative overviews of the current state of knowledge of the problem written by investigators who are internationally known for their significant contribution to our current understanding of the mechanism of anesthesia. It attempts to bridge molecular, cellular, integrative and systems-level actions of anesthetics with respect to their effects on consciousness and memory. Through a better understanding of how anesthetics work, we hope to also uncover the neurobiological bases of some of the deepest mysteries of the human mind; how it self-reflectively knows, perceives and remembers. This book should appeal to anesthesiologists, neurologists, psychologists, neuroscientists -- essentially anyone interested in anesthesia, consciousness, or memory. It provides insight into the current state of knowledge, and a perspective for future treatments of the subject as guided by novel hypotheses.

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