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Approx.406 pages
List of contents
1. Autonomic Nervous System
2. Corticotropin releasing factor and the urocortins
3. Pro-opiomelanocortin
4. Arousal
5. Brain Regions involved in stress
6. Cerebral Metabolism, Brain Imaging and the stress response
7. Acute Stress Response: Experimental (including startle reflex)
8. Restraint Stress
9. Resilience
10. Stress-Hyporesponsive Period
11. Effects of Extreme High and Low Pressure
12. Avoidance
13. Stress and the Blood-Brain Barrier
14. Multi Drug Resistance P Glycoprotein and other Transporters
15. Glucose Transport, effects of glucocorticoids and adrenaline
16. Hippocampus and hippocampal neurons
17. Memory and Stress
18. Neurogenesis (including neural stem cells)
19. Glia or Neuroglia
20. Excitatory Amino Acids
21. Calcium-Dependent Neurotoxicity
22. GABA (Gamma Aminobutyric Acid) and stress
23. Dopamine, Central
24. Serotonin in Stress
25. Pheromones and stress
26. Instinct Theory
27.
Drosophila Studies
28. Proteases in Prokaryotes and Eukaryotic Cell Organelles
29. Febrile Response
30. Thermal Stress
31. Chaperone Proteins and Chaperonopathies
32. Proteosome and autophagy
33. Oxidative Stress
34. Control of Food Intake and Stress
35. Gender differences in stress response
About the author
Dr. Fink is Honorary Professor in the University of Melbourne and Professorial Research Fellow at the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health. Formerly, he was Scientific Director of the Mental Health Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia. Before returning to Melbourne in 2003, Dr. Fink was University Lecturer in Human Anatomy and Fellow in Physiology and Medicine at Brasenose College and the University of Oxford and served for nearly 20 years as CEO and Director of the UK Medical Research Council’s Brain Metabolism Unit in Edinburgh. He gained distinction through his seminal research discoveries in neuroendocrinology and psychopharmacology published in over 360 scientific papers. Dr. Fink served as President of the European Neuroendocrine Association. His distinctions include Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, Fellow of the Royal Biological Society, Fellow of the Physiological Society, and Honorary Member of the British Society for Neuroendocrinology. Fink was Honorary Professor in the University of Edinburgh, delivered the inaugural Geoffrey Harris Prize Lecture of the British Physiological Society, and the Wolfson Lecture. In 1979 he was awarded the Royal Society - Israel Academy Exchange Fellowship which enabled him to spend a research year at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot Israel. In 2000 he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award of the International Society of Psychoneuroendocrinology. His membership of learned societies includes Emeritus member of the Society for Neuroscience, the Endocrine Society and the Genetics Society of America.
Dr. Fink has edited several scientific books with Elsevier, including Stress Science: Neuroendocrinology (2009), Stress Consequences: Mental, Neuropsychological and Socioeconomic (2009), Stress of War, Conflict and Disaster (2010), the Handbook of Neuroendocrinology (2011), and most notably the 4-volume second edition of the Encyclopedia of Stress (2007) on which this new Handbook of Stress series is based. He was founding Editor-in-Chief of the first edition of the Encyclopedia of Stress (2000) which was awarded the 2001 British Medical Association commendation for its contribution to Mental Health. The first volume of his Handbook of Stress series, entitled “Stress: Concepts, Cognition, Emotion, and Behavior”, received the BMA High Commendation in the Health and Social Care category as one of the top titles in its discipline.