Sleep is one of lifes fundamental requirements, and like oxygen, water, and food, we simply cannot live without it. Sleep is essential for tissue repair, metabolism, growth, infection control, and for learning, memory, and emotional regulation. Moreover, these critical functions of sleep remain true across the lifespan. In many ways sleep is natures medicine; it is what nature has provided to deliver daytime functioning and to maintain health and wellbeing.The Oxford Handbook of Sleep and Sleep Disorders has been carefully collated by its internationally renowned editors to provide a comprehensive and up-to-date guide to our understanding of sleep and circadian processes, and of the clinical disorders of sleep and sleep-wake regulation. The handbook therefore covers what sleep is and why it matters, but also explains the disorders of sleep, and how they can be assessed, differentiated, and treated.Comprising 46 chapters, each written by leading experts in their field, the handbook is organized around four sections:: 1. the fundamentals of sleep and circadian processes; 2. the roles and functions of sleep; 3. societal factors influencing sleep; and 4. disorders of sleep and circadian function. This final section is further subdivided into several components including epidemiology, classification, and assessment; management and treatment; and lifespan issues and special populations.Taken together the handbook offers clinicians and scientists the most contemporary and authoritative single resource for clinical practice and for research in the developing fields of sleep science and sleep medicine.
Introduction; Section 1: The Fundamentals of Sleep and Circadian Processes; Chapter 1: Sleep and the Brain; Lilia Roshchupkina, Charline Urbain, and Philippe Peigneux; Chapter 2: The Regulation of Human Sleep and Wakefulness: Sleep Homeostasis and Circadian Rhythmicity; Derk-Jan Dijk and Alpar S. Lazar; Chapter 3: Sleep and Circadian Development in the Early and Developing Years; Innessa Donskoy and Temitayo Oyegbile-Chidi; Chapter 4: Sleep and Circadian Development in Adults and Older Adults; Jeanne F. Duffy, Arturo Arrona-Palacios, and Pamela Song; Chapter 5: The Genetics of Sleep; James B. Jaggard, Keri J. Ngo, and Philippe Mourrain; Chapter 6: Local Sleep; Vladyslav V. Vyazovskiy and Thomas Andrillon; Section 2: The Roles and Functions of Sleep; Chapter 7: Why We Sleep; H. Craig Heller; Chapter 8: Brain Clearance, Sleep, and Circadian Rhythms: Implications for Brain Health; Eva M. van Heese, Erik N.T.P. Bakker, and Ysbrand D. van der Werf; Chapter 9: Sleep and Circadian Rhythms and Metabolism; Anne-Marie Chang, Praneet C. Kaki, Robin K. Yuan, Christopher M. Depner, and Orfeu M. Buxton; Chapter 10: Sleep, Neurocognitive Function, Learning, and Memory; Daniel Baena, Alyssa Pozzobon, Joel Hordijk, Laura B. Ray, and Stuart M. Fogel; Chapter 11: Sleep and Human Performance; Courtney A. Kurinec, Jonah A. Scott, and Hans P. A. Van Dongen; Chapter 12: Sleep and Emotion Regulation; Debora Meneo, Monica Martoni, and Chiara Baglioni; Chapter 13: Sleep, Dreams, and Dreaming; Joseph De Koninck; Section 3: Societal Factors Influencing Sleep; Chapter 14: Multidimensional Sleep Health: An Emerging Framework for Understanding Sleep in Relation to Multiple Health Outcomes; Caitlan A. Tighe, Meredith L. Wallace, Rachel P. K. Conlon, Marquis S. Hawkins, Christopher C. Imes, and Daniel J. Buysse; Chapter 15: Sleep, Social Inequalities, and Societal Costs; Mari Hysing, Tormod B?e, and B?rge Sivertsen; Chapter 16: Sleep, Health, and Shift Work; Siri Waage and Bj?rn Bjorvatn; Chapter 17: Sex Differences in Sleep; Fiona C. Baker, Rena Wang, and Helen S. Driver; Chapter 18: The Impact of Prescription and Recreational Drugs on Sleep; Kai Spiegelhalder, Christoph Nissen, and Dieter Riemann; Chapter 19: Bedtime Social Media Use and Sleep: A New Understanding of Social, Emotional, and Cognitive Processes; Holly Scott and Heather Cleland Woods; Section 4: Disorders of Sleep and Circadian Function: Epidemiology, Classification, and Assessment; Chapter 20: The Epidemiology of Sleep and Circadian Disorders; Katie Stone and Qian Xiao; Chapter 21: Sleep Disorders: Classification and Diagnosis; Jack D. Edinger, Ana I. Fins, and Charles M. Morin; Chapter 22: Value-Based Clinical Sleep Medicine: Health Economic Considerations Regarding Insomnia and Obstructive Sleep Apnea; Emerson M. Wickwire; Chapter 23: Clinical Assessment of Sleep-Wake Complaints; Jason C. Ong, Colin A. Espie, and James K. Wyatt; Chapter 24: Actigraphy and Behavioral Assessments of Sleep and Circadian Disorders; Monica R. Kelly, Nathaniel Yuan, Alexander J. Erickson, and Jennifer L. Martin; Chapter 25: Polysomnography and Emerging Technologies to Evaluate Sleep Disorders; Thomas Penzel, Ingo Fietze, Martin Glos, Matthew Salanitro, and Lisa Rosenblum; Section 5: Disorders of Sleep and Circadian Function: Management and Treatment; Chapter 26: Insomnia I: Conceptualization and Etiology; Hannah Scott, Philip Gehrman, and Michael Perlis; Chapter 27: Insomnia II: Behavioral and Physiological Assessment; Celyne H. Bastien, Jason G. Ellis, Florence Lambert-Beaudet, Alexandre Rudziavick-Provencal, and Elham Garmroudinezhad-Rostami; Chapter 28: Cognitive Behavioral Therapies for Insomnia: Current Status and Challenges Ahead; Charles M. Morin and Simon D. Kyle; Chapter 29: Parasomnias I: Nightmares; Serena Scarpelli, Valentina Alfonsi, and Luigi De Gennaro; Chapter 30: Parasomnias II: REM Sleep Behavior Disorder; Alex Iranzo; Chapter 31: Parasomnias III: Sleep Terrors and Somnambulism; Antonio Zadra and Francesca Siclari; Chapter 32: Circadian Rhythm Sleep-Wake Disorders I: Phase-Advanced and Phase-Delayed Syndromes; Leon Lack, Gorica Micic, and Nicole Lovato; Chapter 33: Shift Work, Irregular, and Non-24-Hour Sleep-Wake Rhythm Disorders; Diane B. Boivin and Philippe Boudreau; Chapter 34: Sleep-Related Breathing Disorders I: Physiology and Etiology; Danny J. Eckert; Chapter 35: Sleep-Related Breathing Disorders II: Clinical Management; Amy M. Sawyer, Alexa J. Watach, Bruno Saconi, and Lindsey Clark; Chapter 36: Narcolepsies and Other Central Hypersomnolence Disorders; Yves Dauvilliers and Lucie Barateau; Chapter 37: Restless Legs Syndrome and Periodic Limb Movement Disorder; Raquel Martin, Celia Garcia-Malo, Elisa Gamo, Alejandro Herrero, Sofia Romero, Alba Garcia, and Diego Garcia-Borreguero; Section 6: Disorders of Sleep and Circadian Function: Lifespan Issues and Special Populations; Chapter 38: Sleep-Related Problems in Childhood and Adolescence; Liat Tikotzky, Michal Kahn, Michael Gradisar, and Oliviero Bruni; Chapter 39: Sleep Disorders in the Elderly; Ali Amidi, Sonia Ancoli-Israel, Jeanne E. Maglione, and Lisa M. Wu; Chapter 40: Sleep and Psychiatric Disorders; Rachel Manber, Jessica R. Dietch, Nicole B. Gumport, and Norah Simpson; Chapter 41: Womens Sleep and Circadian Rhythms From Puberty to Menopausal Transition; Bilgay Izci Balserak and Kathy Aldrich Lee; Chapter 42: Sleep and Medical Disorders; Leanne Fleming, Megan Crawford, Bethany Martin, Mhairi Patience, and Samantha Fisher-Hicks; Chapter 43: Sleep in Patients With Substance Use Disorders; M. Elizabeth Cardoni, Bhanu Prakash Kolla, Mandilyn Graham, Yosef Bronsteyn, and J. Todd Arnedt; Chapter 44: Sleep-Wake Disturbances in Individuals With Traumatic Brain Injury; Marie-Christine Ouellet, Simon Beaulieu-Bonneau, and Charles M. Morin; Chapter 45: Sleep in People With Intellectual Disabilities; Luci D. Wiggs; Chapter 46: Sexsomnia and Sexual Assault: The Role of the Sleep Forensics Investigator in Court; Michel A Cramer Bornemann and Carlos H. Schenck;
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