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At first glance, a book called Drug-Induced Movement Disorders may inspire the question, How specialized can one get? If one considers this work a bit longer, however, one realizes the importance of such a book, especially (but certainly not exclusively) for psychiatrists and neurologists. In many cases these disorders are either treatable or preventable, and awareness of their pathophysiologic and phenomenologic features (as well as of the means of prevention and treatment) is vital in almost every practice of psychiatry and neurology. Internists and family physicians would benefit as well from the caveats associated with a multitude of drugs, not
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