Pages that link to "Q48967260"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Reduced rapid eye movement latency. A predictor of recurrence in depression (Q48967260):
Displaying 38 items.
- Sleep disturbances in highly stress reactive mice: Modeling endophenotypes of major depression (Q31004468) (← links)
- Neuroendocrine, polysomnographic and psychometric observations in healthy subjects at high familial risk for affective disorders: the current state of the 'Munich vulnerability study'. (Q31925041) (← links)
- Does sleep EEG data distinguish between UP, BPI or BPII major depressions? An age and gender controlled study (Q32060846) (← links)
- Prospective associations of insomnia markers and symptoms with depression (Q33741575) (← links)
- REM sleep abnormalities and psychiatry (Q33921435) (← links)
- Overnight therapy? The role of sleep in emotional brain processing (Q33932518) (← links)
- Physiological effects of electroconvulsive therapy and transcranial magnetic stimulation in major depression (Q34110881) (← links)
- Ventromedial prefrontal cortex regulates depressive-like behavior and rapid eye movement sleep in the rat. (Q34302196) (← links)
- Treatment of insomnia in patients with mood disorders (Q34378479) (← links)
- Sleep disorders in psychiatric practice (Q34482230) (← links)
- Predictors of response to treatment in children and adolescents with mood disorders (Q35142081) (← links)
- Sleep homeostasis in alcohol-dependent, depressed and healthy control men. (Q35167054) (← links)
- Sleep disorders as core symptoms of depression (Q35237012) (← links)
- Sleep disturbances in pediatric depression (Q35693157) (← links)
- The Effects of Sleep Continuity Disruption on Positive Mood and Sleep Architecture in Healthy Adults (Q36744089) (← links)
- Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep: an endophenotype for depression (Q37067688) (← links)
- Current perspectives on the genetics of unipolar depression (Q37218496) (← links)
- The Munich vulnerability study on affective disorders: microstructure of sleep in high-risk subjects (Q37371788) (← links)
- Circadian rhythms and treatment implications in depression (Q37778477) (← links)
- Continuation and maintenance pharmacotherapy for unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. (Q40866452) (← links)
- Electroencephalographic sleep studies in depressed outpatients treated with interpersonal psychotherapy: II. Longitudinal studies at baseline and recovery (Q41123156) (← links)
- Treatment of major depression in later life: a life cycle perspective (Q41544410) (← links)
- Electroencephalographic sleep studies in depressed outpatients treated with interpersonal psychotherapy: I. Baseline studies in responders and nonresponders (Q43546592) (← links)
- Reduced rapid eye movement sleep latency in patients with Parkinson's disease (Q44398356) (← links)
- Comparative effects of duloxetine and desipramine on sleep EEG in healthy subjects (Q45004462) (← links)
- All-night electroencephalographic sleep and cranial computed tomography in depression. A study of unipolar and bipolar patients (Q48578350) (← links)
- The Munich Vulnerability Study on Affective Disorders: stability of polysomnographic findings over time (Q48650476) (← links)
- Sleep-onset rapid eye movement after electroconvulsive therapy is more frequent in patients who respond less well to electroconvulsive therapy (Q48653335) (← links)
- Sleep problems: a predictor of long-term work disability? A four-year prospective study (Q48694199) (← links)
- Sleep electroencephalographic coherence abnormalities in individuals at high risk for depression: a pilot study (Q48725489) (← links)
- Latent structure of EEG sleep variables in depressed and control subjects: descriptions and clinical correlates (Q48789940) (← links)
- Psychiatric and polysomnographic evaluation of sleep disturbances (Q48801705) (← links)
- Controlled Comparison of Electrophysiological Sleep in Families of Probands With Unipolar Depression (Q53758124) (← links)
- Reference Data for Polysomnography-Measured and Subjective Sleep in Healthy Adults (Q60630044) (← links)
- Dexamethasone response, thyrotropin-releasing hormone stimulation, rapid eye movement latency, and subtypes of depression (Q61480106) (← links)
- Self-reported sleep disturbance as a prodromal symptom in recurrent depression (Q73230264) (← links)
- Differential response of rapid eye movement sleep to cholinergic blockade by scopolamine in currently depressed, remitted, and normal control subjects (Q73246114) (← links)
- Which depressive symptoms are related to which sleep electroencephalographic variables? (Q73851871) (← links)