
Nausea is a complex sensation that results from the interaction of certain fixed biological factors, such as gender, with changeable psychological factors, such as anxiety. This is the first book to provide a complete, in-depth explanation of what we know about nausea, along with the latest research results on its causes and treatment. As it is the product of long-term collaboration between scientists from the three main approaches to studying and treating nausea--psychology, gastroenterology, and physiology--the information this book provides is both comprehensive and well integrated. The book is divided into two parts, on mechanisms and management, respectively, and four sections. The chapters in Section I introduce the concept of nausea as a protective control mechanism with individual dynamic thresholds, explain the function of nausea, review past and present conceptions of nausea, and describe the prevalence of nausea in different conditions. Section II includes four basic chapters that review what is known about the physiological bases of nausea. Other chapters explore the roles of the central nervous system, autonomic nervous system, endocrine system, and gastric dysrhythmias. Section III presents the difficult problem of measuring nausea, with chapters focusing on measuring nausea in humans and studying it in animals. Section IV forms the second part of the book, on the management of nausea. The main chapters cover nausea and its treatment in several conditions, including chronic nausea, diabetes, pregnancy, post-operative, cancer and its treatment, and provocative motion. A final chapter discusses future research, including three preliminary studies of novel treatment approaches.
This book investigates the complex physiological and psychological mechanisms underlying nausea and provides a comprehensive framework for its clinical management. The authors, a collaborative team of experts in gastroenterology, physiology, and psychology, synthesize current research to explain nausea as a protective biological mechanism. They present an integrated model that accounts for individual variability, environmental triggers, and the systemic interactions between the central nervous, autonomic, and endocrine systems.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a foundational interdisciplinary resource that successfully bridges the gap between psychological and physiological research. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which makes it a primary reference for clinicians and researchers in the field of gastrointestinal health.
Page Count:
470
Publication Date:
2011-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190292342
ISBN-13:
9780190292348
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