6 books found
by Donald Hamilton Rankin
1926
by Harvey S. Singer, Jonathan W. Mink, Donald L. Gilbert, Joseph Jankovic
2022 · Academic Press
Movement Disorders in Childhood, Third Edition provides the most up-to-date information on the diseases and disorders that affect motor control, an important area of specialization within child neurology. In this new edition, each chapter has been fully revised to include all of the latest scientific and therapeutic advances. Updates include new insights in motor development, control, goal-directed and habitual behaviors, classifications of movements and their complex and integrated circuitry. The authors also discuss developments in pathophysiologic mechanisms, immunology and metabolic disorders. New chapters include coverage of genetics of movement disorders and movement disorders in psychiatric conditions.Appendices include an updated and revised drug index and genetic search strategy. An updated Companion website hosts selected educational videos to help diagnose movement disorders. - Provides the only current reference specifically focused on childhood movement disorders - Investigates the underlying etiologies and mechanisms of these disorders - Revised and updated with new materials and a more disease-oriented approach - Contains new chapters on the genetics of movement disorders and movement disorders in psychiatric conditions - Includes new videos of instructive and unusual childhood movement disorders
by Donald R. Cornelius, Fred Lavin, Harry Wayne Springfield, Murrell Williams Talbot
1955
by Barbara Ann Anderson, Betty Thomas Richardson, C. R. Lockard, Elsie Halstrom Dawson, Fred Charles Simmons, George Meredith Jemison, Raymond Frank Taylor, Anson William Lindenmuth, Elbert Luther Little, Gladys L. Gilpin, J. A. Putnam, Howard Reynolds, John James Keetch, Roswell Donald Carpenter
1982
Donald Pisani's history of perhaps the boldest economic and social program ever undertaken in the United States--to reclaim and cultivate vast areas of previously unusable land across the country—shows in fascinating detail how ambitious government programs fall prey to the power of local interest groups and the federal system of governance itself. What began as the underwriting of a variety of projects to create family farms and farming communities had become by the 1930s a massive public works and regional development program, with an emphasis on the urban as much as on the rural West.