Item type | Home library | Class number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Electronic book | Stenhouse Library (Kingston Hospital) Online | Link to resource | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Part I: Interface of dermatology and psychiatry. Perspectives on management of pediatric dermatologic disorders -- Psychoneuroimmunology and other interactions between skin and psyche -- A clinician's approach to psychocutaneous diseases in adolescents: Untying the Gordian knot -- Quality of life issues in children and adolescents with dermatological conditions and their wider impact on the family and society -- Part II: Psychophysiologic disorders. Atopic dermatitis: a psychocutaneous review -- Psoriasis and children: A psychological approach -- The acnes: Acne vulgaris, acne rosacea, and acne excori�ee -- Psychogenic purpura (Gardner-Diamond syndrome) -- Part III: Psychiatric disorders with dermatologic manifestations. Body dysmorphic disorder in adolescents -- Delusional infestation in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood -- Dermatitis artefacta, skin picking, and other self-injurious behaviors: A psychological perspective -- Trichotillomania -- Psychogenic pruritus with particular emphasis on children and adolescents -- Part IV: Dermatologic disorders predisposing to psychiatric disorders. Disorders of hair loss -- Disorders of skin pigmentation -- Skin adnexal disorders -- Part V: Systematic diseases with psychodermatologic manifestations. Neurocutaneous disorders -- Collagen vascular disorders: Psychiatric and dermatologic manifestations -- Psychocutaneous manifestations of endocrine disorders -- Inborn errors of metabolism with psychiatric and dermatologic features -- Part VI: Special issues in management of psychocutaneous disorders. Psychiatric complications of dermatological treatments -- Dermatologic manifestations of psychotropic medications -- Non-pharmacological approaches to treat psychocutaneous disorders -- Psychiatric disorders frequently encountered in dermatology practices.
Psychodermatologic disorders comprise for up to one third of dermatologic conditions in different clinical settings. By virtue of their complex nature these disorders can be very difficult to treat and adversely impact long term outcomes. This book examines the bidirectional relationship between psychiatry and dermatology in children and adolescents. The information are presented in an easy to follow format to be used as a clinical reference by physicians and paramedical staff in various fields of medicine including pediatrics, primary care, internal medicine, psychiatry and dermatology.
Online resource; title from electronic title page (ebrary, viewed on March 18, 2015).
In English.
WorldCat record variable field(s) change: 650
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