Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · June 2012
OBJECTIVE: To test three theories of hypercortisolemia in depression-hypothalamic overdrive, impaired glucocorticoid feedback, or autonomous cortisol production. METHOD: We applied an overnight low-cortisol feedback strategy by administering metyrapone to ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand Suppl · 2007
OBJECTIVE: The mechanisms mediating hypercortisolemia in depression remain controversial. Adopting the biomarker strategy, we studied adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and cortisol dynamics in hypercortisolemic and non-hypercortisolemic depressed in-patients, and ...
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Journal ArticleJ Clin Psychopharmacol · April 2005
The effect of fluoxetine (FLU) in posttraumatic stress disorder was studied in a one-year trial. Subjects received open-label treatment for 6 months, followed by double-blind randomized treatment with FLU or placebo (PBO) for 6 months. Rates of relapse wer ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Psychiatric Practice · 2004
Objective. Risperidone is the only second-generation (atypical) antipsychotic medication available in a long-acting injectable formulation. The mechanism of drug delivery and the pharmacokinetics of this medication are distinctively different from the firs ...
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Journal ArticleSchizophr Res · March 1, 2003
We examined the test-retest reliabilities of reported and objective measures of smoking, and the intercorrelations among these measures, in acutely psychotic patients with schizophrenia to determine whether severe psychiatric illness affects the utility of ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatry Res · December 30, 2002
While several studies are available on the immediate effects of marijuana and its active ingredient tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), we examined the effects of intravenous infusion of THC on rCBF and behavior over a 120-mi ...
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Journal ArticleNeuropsychopharmacology · October 2002
We applied nicotine 21 mg and matching placebo transdermal patches to thirty haloperidol-treated patients with schizophrenia who smoked. Clinical assessments of bradykinesia-rigidity were lower during nicotine patch administration than during placebo patch ...
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Journal ArticleSchizophr Res · September 1, 2002
INTRODUCTION: Schizophrenia patients, particularly those with specific types of hallucinations and delusions, may have a deficit in monitoring the generation of thought. This deficit, termed autonoetic agnosia, may result in the conclusion that self-genera ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · January 2002
OBJECTIVE: Although activation of an immune response during major depressive episodes has been reported, less is known about changes during manic and mixed bipolar episodes. METHOD: Albumin and leukocyte levels were compared between subjects in manic and m ...
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Journal ArticleCompr Psychiatry · 2002
We characterized 67 newly admitted patients in manic or mixed episodes of bipolar I disorder on categorical and continuous measures of smoking and psychosis to test the hypothesis that patients who were smokers would be more likely to demonstrate psychotic ...
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Journal ArticleJ Addict Dis · 2000
BACKGROUND: The focus of this report is on the possible role that the age of first use of marijuana may play on brain morphology and function. METHODS: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) were utilized to study 57 subjec ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · July 1999
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between depersonalization induced by tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), and regional brain activation. METHOD: Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured by means of positron emission tomography (PET) i ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · July 1, 1999
BACKGROUND: Of patients with schizophrenia, 70 to 80% smoke. Nicotine corrects certain information processing and cognitive psychomotor deficits seen in many patients with schizophrenia. Clozapine, but not conventional antipsychotics, has been shown to cor ...
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Journal ArticleBrain Res · June 29, 1998
Because marijuana continues to be the most commonly used illicit drug, its effects on the brain function are of major interest. We utilized positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to study the effects of delta-9-tetrahydroca ...
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Journal ArticleJ Psychiatr Res · 1998
There is evidence that familial factors serve as determinants of risk for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), especially familial anxiety. This study investigates the relationship between chronic PTSD and family psychiatric morbidity. The sample was dra ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatry Res · May 16, 1997
While large numbers of studies are available on anxiety and cerebral blood flow (CBF), little is known about their relationship to extracranial (forehead) flow. The participants were 24 generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) patients and 26 normal volunteers. ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · May 1, 1997
Cerebral blood velocity (CBV) (measured with transcranial Doppler, TCD) and other physiological and rating scale indices were measured before, during, and after inhaling a mixture of 40% nitrous oxide/oxygen and 40% nitrogen/oxygen, given during two separa ...
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Journal ArticlePsychopharmacology (Berl) · May 1997
Abecarnil is a metabolically stable beta-carboline that binds with high affinity and selectivity to central benzodiazepine receptors. The effects on cognitive and psychomotor skills of abecarnil (ZK 112-119), 2.5 mg and 5.0 mg, were compared with lorazepam ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · April 1, 1997
A randomized, between-groups, repeated measures design was used to evaluate changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF), rating scales, and physiologic indices under resting conditions, during 5% CO2 inhalation in combination with epinephrine or saline infusions, ...
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Journal ArticleLife Sci · 1997
OBJECTIVE AND METHOD: The acute effects of delta9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) on cerebral blood flow (CBF) were studied in human subjects. Regional CBF was measured with 15O-water and Positron Emission Tomography (PET) in 32 volunteers with a history of exp ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · December 15, 1996
Ten men inpatients who met DSM-III-R criteria for schizophrenia participated. On five occasions at least one week apart, each subject had an intravenous line placed at 0730 after an overnight fast. On each occasion blood samples were drawn at 0800 and hour ...
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Journal ArticleNeuropsychopharmacology · November 1996
Nearly 90% of schizophrenics smoke cigarettes, considerably higher than the general population's rate of 25%. There is some indication that schizophrenics may smoke as a form of self-medication. Nicotine has a variety of pharmacologic effects that may both ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · October 1, 1996
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured with the 133Xenon inhalation technique and forehead skin flow with laser Doppler, before and twice after 0.3 milligram/kilogram of cocaine hydrochloride and a placebo given intravenously to six cocaine abusers, during ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of Psychiatry · 1996
Objective: This study sought to determine the relationships between serum clozapine levels and therapeutic response. Method: Fifty-six inpatients who met the DSM-III-R criteria for chronic schizophrenia and who had not responded to extended treatment with ...
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Journal ArticleSchizophr Bull · 1996
We report an exploratory study examining the interrelationships among common sense, insight into psychosis, and performance on a battery of neuropsychological tests in 32 patients with schizophrenia evaluated at the time of discharge from involuntary hospi ...
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Journal ArticleJ Subst Abuse Treat · 1996
In 62 individuals recovering from substance abuse, materialism and spiritualism and cognitive patterns were quantified, before (retrospectively) and after recovery with the Mathew Materialism Spiritualism Scale (MMSS) and a Cognitive Patterns Questionnaire ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of Psychiatry · 1996
Objective: To characterize better the length of time required for the onset of improvement during clozapine treatment for refractory schizophrenia, the author reanalyzed data from a naturalistic outcome study. Method: Medical records of 100 adults sequenti ...
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Journal ArticleJ Nerv Ment Dis · December 1995
We administered a series of 12 brief vignettes depicting examples of positive, negative, and manic psychopathology in everyday language to 21 patients with schizophrenia and 20 patients with mania. We asked patients to rate, first, how similar they were to ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neuroimmunol · August 1995
The effect of an endogenous opiate, beta-endorphin, on the replication of HIV was investigated in brain perivascular microglia. Beta-endorphin enhanced the synthesis of p-24 antigen and transactivation of HIV promoter. Dialysed culture supernatants of endo ...
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Journal ArticleJ Stud Alcohol · July 1995
OBJECTIVE: A modified version of an instrument called the Mathew Materialism-Spiritualism Scale (MMSS), originally developed in India, was evaluated for possible use in substance abuse research in the U.S. METHOD: The scale was administered to 62 individua ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatric Services · 1995
Objective: The atypical antipsychotic medication clozapine is an effective treatment for refractory psychosis; however, the efficacy of clozapine when used in public mental health programs has yet to he fully characterized. This study assessed the outcome ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatric Services · 1995
Objective: This paper is intended to help American clinicians and investigators further their understanding of the clinical use of clozapine by reviewing experience with the drug in Russia, where it was introduced 17 years before it became available in the ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatry Res · February 1994
To evaluate the sensitivity of a computerized cognitive-neuromotor test battery in assessing the effects of marijuana (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol [THC]), we conducted a study of 10 healthy male volunteers who were experienced marijuana smokers. After ext ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Clinical Psychiatry · 1994
Background: The seizures associated with the atypical antipsychotic medication clozapine represent a serious side effect of treatment. In premarketing studies, seizures occurred at a crude rate of 3.5%. It is possible that the rate and character of seizure ...
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Journal ArticleJ Clin Psychopharmacol · December 1993
Clonazepam and placebo were administered in a double-blind pilot study to 75 outpatients with social phobia. The mean maximum dose of clonazepam was 2.4 mg/day at endpoint (range, 0.5 to 3 mg). Treatment was continued for up to 10 weeks. The results of an ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · June 1, 1993
This article examines patients with schizophrenia and controls to determine whether asymmetry and anteroposterior (AP) gradient of cerebral blood flow (CBF) are related to duration of illness, and whether they are themselves correlated. CBF was measured wi ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Psychiatry · May 1993
OBJECTIVE: The authors examined differences in the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in individuals who did or did not have alcoholic parents. METHOD: They used data from the National Institute of Mental Health Epidemiologic Catchment Area project, speci ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · March 15, 1993
Depersonalization and other behavioral and physiological indices were monitored before and after the administration of high- and low-potency marijuana cigarettes and a placebo cigarette in 35 physically and mentally healthy normal volunteers. The cigarette ...
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Journal ArticleLife Sci · 1993
In experienced marijuana smokers, marijuana smoking was accompanied by a significant bilateral increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF) especially in the frontal regions and cerebral blood velocity. The post-marijuana CBF increase could not be explained on th ...
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Journal ArticleHospital Pharmacy · 1993
Medical records of 90 consecutive patients who started clozapine were reviewed to see how this drug is being used with other psychotropic medications and to evaluate what impact it has had on the drug regimens of these patients. Data from up to 6 months be ...
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Journal ArticleAdministration and Policy in Mental Health · 1993
State hospitals provide essential services to many of society's most ill and needy individuals. As the next century approaches, state hospitals can best fulfil their missions by developing as high-quality neuropsychiatric/rehabilitation institutes, as oppo ...
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Journal ArticleAdministration and Policy in Mental Health · 1993
Training has been a longstanding and fruitful area of collaboration between the public and academic sectors. Graduate medical education for psychiatry residents is one example. This paper reviews the history of Oregon's public psychiatry training program a ...
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Journal ArticlePsychopharmacology · 1993
This double-blind placebo controlled, parallel design clinical trial compared the therapeutic effects of the addition of lithium or placebo to haloperidol in 21 seriously ill state hospital patients with DSM-III-R schizophrenia, who did not have concurrent ...
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Journal ArticleJ Cereb Blood Flow Metab · September 1992
Regional CBF was measured with the 133Xe inhalation technique before and thrice after smoking marijuana of two strengths and placebo in 20 physically and mentally healthy male volunteers with a previous history of exposure to marijuana. They were drug-free ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · August 1992
Marijuana is known to cause symptoms suggestive of orthostatic hypotension such as dizziness and fainting during upright posture. We examined changes in cerebral blood velocity (CBV) and peripheral circulation during upright posture after smoking marijuana ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · July 15, 1992
Velocity of blood flow in the middle cerebral artery was measured with transcranial Doppler flowmeter before, during, and 1 hr after smoking a marijuana cigarette and a placebo cigarette during two separate visits to the laboratory. Ten healthy, right-hand ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · April 1, 1992
Cerebral blood velocity (CBV) was measured with transcranial Doppler in 6 normal right-handed male volunteers before and for 50 min after an intravenous injection of 0.1 mg/kg of diazepam and normal saline during 2 separate visits to the laboratory. Blood ...
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Journal ArticleAnnals of Clinical Psychiatry · January 1, 1992
Psychological and physiological indices were monitored before and 120 minutes after smoking high- and low-potency marijuana cigarettes and a placebo cigarette in 35 physically and psychiatrically healthy normal volunteers during three separate visits to th ...
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Journal ArticleAnnals of Clinical Psychiatry · 1992
Case reports of clozapine treatment for refractory schizophrenia have focused on instances of marked therapeutic response, raising the expectation of dramatic 'cures' and the emptying of state hospital wards. However, in clinical practice, a spectrum of re ...
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Journal ArticleProg Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry · 1992
RU486 is a synthetic glucocorticoid antagonist. The authors used RU486 to examine the hypothesis that the elevated plasma cortisol and ACTH in patients is due to suprahypophyseal stimulation of the anterior pituitary. Seven patients and matched controls we ...
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Journal ArticleHospital and Community Psychiatry · 1992
Medical records of the first 37 patients to begin clozapine treatment at a state hospital in Oregon were reviewed for six months before clozapine treatment and six months after. Patients had a long history of schizophrenia and had responded poorly to antip ...
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Journal ArticleCommunity Mental Health Journal · 1992
In 1989, the Public Psychiatry Training Program of the Oregon Health Sciences University Department of Psychiatry and Dammasch State Hospital opened a collaborative Professional Education Unit with the author as Director. This article describes the Unit's ...
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Journal ArticleJ Clin Psychiatry · November 1991
An observer measure of social phobic symptoms, referred to as the Brief Social Phobia Scale, consists of 11 items, 7 evaluating commonly feared or avoided situations and 4 additional items measuring autonomic distress. Symptoms represented by the scale ite ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatry Res · October 1991
In the normal brain, cerebral blood flow (CBF) and function are closely coupled. Thus, changes in brain function associated with drug-induced anxiety reduction should be accompanied by parallel CBF changes. Benzodiazepines such as diazepam have been report ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Psychiatry · March 1991
OBJECTIVE AND METHOD: This paper reviews acute and chronic effects of drugs of abuse on cerebral blood flow (CBF) and metabolism and their clinical significance. The most important source of information for the review is human research reports published in ...
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Journal ArticlePsychopharmacol Bull · 1991
During a study of neuroleptic threshold haloperidol doses as treatment for newly admitted schizophrenic patients, we examined whether variables extracted from patients' clinical histories, the type and severity of patients' psychopathology at baseline, or ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of EEG Technology · January 1, 1991
Recent studies of factors affecting the P100 latency of the pattern visual evoked potential (PVEP) have questioned the earlier assumption that gender has a statistically significant effect. Guthkelch et al. (1987) reported that head size is an important va ...
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Journal ArticleProg Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry · 1991
1. The authors investigated the role of serotonin in the hypothalamo pituitary adrenal escape from depression. 2. Maximal dose of fenfluramine was administered to normal individuals pretreated with dexamethasone. 3. Fenfluramine had only a minimal and inco ...
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Journal ArticleBiol Psychiatry · July 1, 1990
It is well established that the adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulates the synthesis and release of cortisol from the adrenal cortex, but the role of ACTH in the physiological regulation of basal cortisol secretion has received surprisingly little s ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Psychiatry · July 1990
The relationship between anxiety and cerebral blood flow (CBF) is of considerable clinical and research significance. Although a considerable amount of information is available on mechanisms through which anxiety may influence CBF, this topic has not recei ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · July 1990
Caffeine is believed to induce anxiety in normal people and anxiety disorder patients and panic attacks in panic disorder patients. The drug is also known to reduce cerebral blood flow (CBF). Findings suggesting an anxiety-related cerebral vasoconstrictive ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · June 1990
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a potent cerebrovasodilator; even mild changes in CO2 are associated with marked changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF). We measured CBF before and after 5% CO2 inhalation in 19 medicated patients with schizophrenia and 16 normal volu ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Psychiatry · February 1990
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured with the 133xenon inhalation technique in 27 patients with schizophrenia of less than 5 years' duration and in 27 patients with schizophrenia of more than 12 years' duration, under resting conditions. Similar ...
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Journal ArticleCommunity Mental Health Journal · 1990
Comprehensive treatment programs for individuals with schizophrenia usually include a variety of groups, many of which have concrete tasks as a focus: medication management, social skills training, meal preparation, etc. These groups can simultaneously ser ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Psychiatry · August 1989
CO2 inhalation has been reported to induce panic attacks in panic disorder patients. State anxiety, somatic symptoms of anxiety, physiological changes, and cerebral blood flow (CBF) were monitored in panic disorder patients before and after intravenous inj ...
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Journal ArticleBr J Addict · March 1989
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF), mood states and somatic symptoms were measured before and after inhalation of amyl nitrite in 10 physically healthy volunteers with a prior history of using volatile nitrites for recreational purposes. CBF was measured w ...
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Journal ArticleActa Psychiatr Scand · February 1989
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured in experienced (ES) and inexperienced (IS) marijuana smokers with the 133xenon inhalation technique before and after smoking both a high-potency marijuana cigarette and a placebo marijuana cigarette. CBF was measured ...
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Journal ArticleHospital and Community Psychiatry · 1989
As part of a program to assess the needs of patients in a state hospital scheduled to be closed, a psychiatrist provided consultation for 101 chronically ill patients, including formulation of a principal diagnosis by DSM-III-R criteria. Compared with earl ...
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Journal ArticleNeuropsychobiology · 1989
Changes in regional cerebral blood flow and behavioral and physiological indices were monitored after intravenous administration of d-amphetamine sulfate and placebo in groups of patients with schizophrenia and normal volunteers. Amphetamine administration ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatry Res · January 1989
Several investigators have reported higher resting cerebral blood flow (CBF) in females as compared to males. The relationship between sex roles as quantified by Bem's Sex Role Inventory and CBF was evaluated in 106 right-handed, physically and mentally he ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci · 1989
This investigation was designed to test the hypothesis that ear advantage on a dichotic listening (DL) task of pitch discrimination reflects asymmetries in the metabolic activities of the temporal lobes. Fourteen normal subjects, with either a left-ear adv ...
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Journal ArticleJ Clin Endocrinol Metab · August 1988
The effects of the alpha-adrenergic agonist methoxamine on the human hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis was assessed by a placebo-controlled study in the morning and one in the evening. A 5-mg iv bolus dose of methoxamine in normal subjects caused a signi ...
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Journal ArticleArch Gen Psychiatry · June 1988
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured under resting conditions in 108 right-handed schizophrenic inpatients and a matched group of normal controls with the xenon 133 inhalation technique. Forty-six patients were free of all medication for two wee ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatry Res · March 1988
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured twice with the 133Xenon inhalation technique, under resting conditions and during 5% CO2 inhalation, in 13 patients with generalized anxiety disorder and a group of normal volunteers of comparable age and sex distribu ...
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Journal ArticleInfant Behavior and Development · January 1, 1988
Behavioral responsiveness to human speech and gentle stroking of the limbs was assessed in 15 very low birth-weight infants (VLBW: <1500 gms) between 30 and 34 weeks postconceptional age. Responsiveness was examined as a function of infants' initial behavi ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · January 1, 1988
The autonomic effects of clovoxamine, a possible new antidepressant, were compared with placebo, imipramine, and amitriptyline in a double‐blind, repeated‐measures, latin‐square study design, using 16 healthy volunteers. Salivary flow, pupillary response, ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Clinical Psychopharmacology · 1986
In an international survey of chronic schizophrenia, data were collected on the Abnormal Involuntary Movements Scale (AIMS) to ascertain the prevalence of tardive dyskinesia. Abnormal movements were found to present in 28% of the sample of 739 patients. Us ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · 1986
In a double-blind placebo-controlled study the effects of clovoxamine on sleep were evaluated. Each of 12 healthy male volunteers was given clovoxamine (50 and 150 mg) and placebo according to a repeated-measures randomized Latin square design. All night s ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · 1986
As part of a multicenter dose determination study designed to evaluate the safety and therapeutic activity of four fixed dose levels of sertraline - a new antidepressant with biochemical characteristics different from tricyclics - 17 patients with diagnose ...
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Journal ArticleEuropean Archives of Psychiatry and Neurological Sciences · 1986
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements and mental status examinations were performed before and 30 min after oral administration of 250 mg of caffeine or a placebo given under double-blind conditions, in two groups of patients with schizophrenia. Caffeine ...
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Journal ArticleStroke · 1986
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured via the 133Xenon inhalation technique in 26 healthy volunteers before and 60 minutes after the oral administration of ethyl alcohol or placebo on a double-blind basis. The cerebral blood flow values, correcte ...
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Journal ArticleBiological Psychiatry · 1986
Study of brain function via cerebral blood flow and metabolism measurements is believed to be of considerable significance in psychiatry. The present study examined the factors that determined patterns of regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) in 140 physical ...
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Journal ArticleProgress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry · 1985
1. As part of an international study of chronic schizophrenia, data on tardive dyskinesia were collected by clinical judgment and a standard rating scale, on over 700 patients. 2. The frequently-reported positive correlation between age and prevalence rate ...
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Journal ArticleYale Journal of Biology and Medicine · 1985
This paper presents a conceptual approach for leading various types of groups of chronically mentally ill patients. Although these groups may have a concrete, task-oriented purpose, with skillful leadership they also function as psychotherapy groups. The d ...
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Journal ArticlePsychopharmacology · 1985
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF), blood pressure, pulse rate, respiratory rate, end-tidal carbon dioxide and mood states were measured before and after IV injections of 15 mg dextroamphetamine sulfate or saline in 22 physically and mentally healthy norma ...
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Journal ArticleBiological Psychiatry · 1985
Drugs like diazepam induce tranquilization in small doses and sedation in larger quanitities. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured before and 5 min after the intravenous administraton of nonsedating doses of diazepam or placebo (given on a doub ...
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Journal ArticleNeuropsychobiology · 1985
Prescription practices were examined as part of a multinational study of chronic hospitalized schizophrenic patients. The study included a total of 768 patients from 8 countries. All patients had a diagnosis (ICD-9) of schizophrenia and met defined criteri ...
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Journal ArticleCanadian Journal of Psychiatry · 1985
In the framework of a multi-national collaborative study carried out in eight countries, 768 chronic hospitalized schizophrenic patients were surveyed. Skin pigmentation was found to be present in 13 patients (1.7%), that is, within the same range (1-2.9%) ...
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Journal ArticleStroke · 1985
While the caffeine induced cerebral vasoconstriction is well documented, the effects of oral ingestion of the drug in a dose range comparable to the quantities in which it is usually consumed and the intensity and duration of the associated reduction in ce ...
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Journal ArticleHeadache · 1985
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements were conducted under resting conditions and after twenty-four hours of caffeine abstinence in groups of high and low caffeine users. CBF was also measured thirty minutes after the oral administration of 250 m ...
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Journal ArticleKidney International · 1985
Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured in patients with dialysis encephalopathy, primary degenerative dementia, dialysis patients with no central nervous system (CNS) complications, and normal controls. Both groups of dialysis patients (with and w ...
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Journal ArticleComprehensive Psychiatry · 1985
In a multinational survey of psychopathological symptoms in 768 chronic hospitalized schizophrenic patients an approximately equal representation of positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia was revealed. This is at variance with the common contentio ...
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Journal ArticlePsychiatric Developments · 1984
Prior to the introduction of neuroleptics a lack of interest in complex classifications of the chronic schizophrenias was due to the lack of effective treatment. With the recognition of neuroleptic response heterogeneity, and of the hazards of long-term ne ...
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Journal ArticleCanadian Journal of Psychiatry · 1984
The conceptual development of Leonhard's classification of the chronic schizophrenias is outlined. The recognition within that classification of the importance of the polarity dimension has led to the identification of two distinct populations - atypical n ...
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Journal ArticleProgress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry · 1984
1. In a double-blind comparative clinical study, both thiothixene and haloperidol were found to be effective agents for rapid tranquilization of manic and schizophrenic patients. 2. While no statistically significant difference in any of the psychopatholog ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · 1984
Fluvoxamine, a new serotonin-reuptake inhibitor, and imipramine were compared under double-blind conditions in 36 unipolar and bipolar depressed inpatients. Both drugs produced significant reductions in depressive symptomatology over a 4-6-wk course of tre ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of Psychiatry · 1984
A patient with schizophrenia developed torsade de pointes, a life-threatening cardiac arrhythmia, due to administration of phenothiazines. An intravenous infusion of isoproterenol improved the symptoms. The etiology and treatment of the syndrome are discus ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · January 1, 1983
In a 28‐day, dose‐range study, 11 chronic schizophrenic inpatients newly admitted to the hospital with acute exacerbations were administered a new antipsychotic, BW 234U, in daily doses ranging from 100 to 400 mg/day on a fixed/flexible schedule to determi ...
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Journal ArticleNeuropsychobiology · 1983
Of the three stages of clinical trial, i.e. design, data collection, analysis, the second stage is the most neglected. The literature abounds with discussions on design and analysis, but there is a dearth of information on the organization and execution of ...
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Journal ArticleBritish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology · 1983
A double-blind placebo- and standard-controlled study was designed to determine the autonomic effects of fluvoxamine, a putative antidepressant possessing a high 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) re-uptake-blocking activity with essentially no effects on noradren ...
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Journal ArticleCanadian Journal of Psychiatry · 1983
A comparison of two independent populations of chronic schizophrenic patients, classified on the basis of Leonhard's system, revealed striking similarities in the distribution of subtypes. The findings lend support to the clinical relevance of Leonhard's t ...
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Journal ArticleComprehensive Psychiatry · 1983
Our general hypothesis was that lower doses of antipsychotic agents than are usually employed may not only be adequate for the maintenance treatment of many schizophrenic patients but may also reduce the risk of neurotoxic effects. To explore the consequen ...
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Journal ArticlePharmacopsychiatria · 1982
Twenty-three patients who completed a four-week, double-blind, clinical trial of bromperidol versus haloperidol were treated with bromperidol for eight additional weeks in a continuation study. Over 87 percent of patients maintained their improved status o ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1982
In a multicenter series of trials, viloxazine was compared with imipramine, amitriptyline, doxepin and placebo in 123 neurotic and endogenous depressive inpatients and outpatients. While significant period effects reflecting improvement were obtained on th ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Clinical Psychiatry · 1982
In a four week, double-blind clinical trial, 20 patients with endogenous depression were randomly assigned to treatment with either viloxazine or imipramine. Statistically significant improvement was observed on the Hamilton Psychiatric Rating Scales for D ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · 1982
In a 4-wk double-blind clinical trial four doses (1, 5, 10, and 20 mg) of flutroline were compared in newly admitted schizophrenic patients. Although there were few statistically significant differences among the four dosage groups, there were at least fiv ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1982
In a double-blind clinical trial with 20 patients suffering from endogenous depression statistically significant changes (improvement) were present in the scores of all assessment instruments. Although no statistically significant differences occurred betw ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1982
There is evidence to indicate that 15% of patients diagnosed as schizophrenic will become chronically hospitalized, and that worldwide one-third to one-half of all psychiatric beds are occupied by schizophrenic patients. In spite of these figures and the p ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Clinical Psychopharmacology · 1982
Both haloperidol- and loxapine-treated patients improved compared to those on placebo on a broad number of clinical ratings reflecting psychopathology and social functioning. Compared to adult psychiatric populations, our global improvement rates of 32 and ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1982
Amoxapine, a tricyclic dibenzoxazepine is an antidepressant which in the dosage range of 150-300 mg/day is notable for its rapid onset of action. Because of the rather long, approximately 30-hour, half-life of 8-hydroxyamoxapine, the active metabolite of a ...
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Journal ArticleHospital and Community Psychiatry · 1981
The right to refuse medication is a legal right now being extended by federal courts to many voluntary and involuntary mental patients. However, little is known of the insight that chronically ill mental patients bring to the decision of whether or not to ...
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Journal ArticleDrug Development Research · 1981
The effects of single doses of 50 mg of viloxazine, 100 mg of viloxazine, 50 mg of imipramine, and placebo given alone and in combination with alcohol on perceptual-motor performance potentially related to driving were studied in eight normal subjects. The ...
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Journal ArticleProgress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology · 1981
Eight normal male volunteers were tested under eight different treatment conditions: amoxapine 50 and 100 mg, amitriptyline 50 mg. and placebo--each condition with and without ethanol--(1.3 g/kg body weight), utilizing a double-blind repeated measures lati ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Clinical Psychiatry · 1981
In a six-week, double-blind clinical study of 35 hospitalized patients with the diagnoses of endogenous depression (18 patients) and depressive neuroses (17 patients), two dosage schedules of amoxapine were compared. While no statistically significant diff ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1980
Amoxapine, a new antidepressant, is a tricyclic dibenzoxazepine compound, the demethylated metabolite of the neuroleptic loxapine. In animal pharmacological studies, amoxapine has shown striking similarities to imipramine. In contrast to the prototype anti ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1980
In a 4-week double-blind trial, 33 patients with depressive neurosis were randomly assigned to either viloxazine, imipramine or placebo. Statistically significant improvement was observed in all treatment groups. Imipramine exhibited significant improvemen ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1980
Therapeutic and adverse effects of three dosages (1, 20 and 100 mg daily) of flutroline, a new γ-carboline with a preclinical pharmacological profile similar to active neuroleptic agents, were compared in a double-blind clinical trial in 25 newly-admitted ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1980
In animal pharmacological studies viloxazine has shown similarities to imipramine. The antidepressant effects of the substance were independently recognized in seven uncontrolled clinical trials and verified in 11 published standard controlled clinical stu ...
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Journal ArticleThe Pavlovian journal of biological science : official journal of the Pavlovian · 1980
Viloxazine, an aryl-oxypropanolamine type β-adreno-receptor antagonist, has been used in the treatment of depression. In a double-blind drug interaction study with flurazepam, a commonly used benzodiazepine hypnotic, viloxazine administered alone decreased ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Clinical Psychiatry · 1980
Anticholinergic effects of mianserin, a new tetracyclic antidepressant, were studied in 5 depressed patients. Prior to and after 1 and 2 hours of the administration of 30 mg of mianserin salivary flow, pupillary response to light and palpebral fissure were ...
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Journal ArticleInternational Pharmacopsychiatry · 1980
Mianserin hydrochloride is a tetracyclic antidepressant with an EEG and clinical activity profile similar to amitriptyline. To investigate the drug's optimal dosage range, a 6-week open comparative trial sequentially assigned 12 depressed patients to one o ...
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