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Adrenergic and serotonergic receptor responsiveness in depression.
L. J. Siever
, E. F. Coccaro
, E. Benjamin
, K. Rubinstein
, K. L. Davis
Friedman Brain Institute
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Psychiatry
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
22
Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Remission
100%
Serotonergic System
100%
Adrenergic Receptors
100%
Depressed Patients
100%
Metabolism
40%
Clonidine
40%
Prolactin
40%
Noradrenergic System
40%
Fenfluramine
40%
Pathophysiology
20%
Serotonin
20%
Growth Hormone
20%
Hormone Response
20%
Acutely Ill Patients
20%
Adrenoceptors
20%
Release Agent
20%
α2-adrenoceptor
20%
Abnormal Regulation
20%
Serotonergic Agonists
20%
Noradrenaline Release
20%
Neuroscience
Serotonergic
100%
Adrenergic Receptor
100%
5-HT Receptor
100%
Metabolic Pathway
66%
Prolactin
66%
Fenfluramine
66%
Clonidine
66%
Agonist
33%
Bovine Somatotropin
33%
Serotonin
33%
Noradrenalin Release
33%
Alpha-2 Adrenergic Receptor
33%
Receptor
33%
Growth Hormone
33%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Remission
100%
Adrenergic Receptor
100%
Serotonin Receptor
100%
Clonidine
40%
Prolactin
40%
Fenfluramine
40%
Pathophysiology
20%
Receptor
20%
Serotonin
20%
Growth Hormone
20%
Noradrenalin
20%
Serotonin Agonist
20%
Alpha 2 Adrenergic Receptor
20%