Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2009
Summary
Neurochemistry of Sleep and Wakefulness focuses on the actions and interactions of neurotransmitters involved in the control and modulation of the behavioral states that we know as waking and sleeping. It presents results and emerging concepts that in recent years have challenged our understanding about the basic brain systems that are involved in sleep and wakefulness. As might be expected, these new findings are also having an effect on the practice of sleep medicine. In fact, once considered a minor sub-specialty, sleep medicine is developing into a significant and growing area of medicine; and much of this growth can be attributed to improved knowledge about brain neurochemistry and the drugs that have been developed as a result.
Thus, inevitably, the relationship between sleep and the chemistry of neurotransmission has become an area of intense medical, biological, and scientific interest. It seemingly affects all facets of our health and well-being. But this relationship is also complex because it involves fundamental, yet still incompletely understood mechanisms and functions in the brain, most notably the essential difference between sleep and wakefulness. Although this field of research in its current form began with the identification of specific chemical neurotransmitter systems in the brain some forty years ago, we can actually date the beginning of research into sleep neurochemistry to the onset of the twentieth century.
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- Neurochemistry of Sleep and Wakefulness , pp. xv - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008