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Results 5961 - 5970 of 18661 for Depression
  • News - 2 Aug 2007
    A University of Iowa study shows that loss or chemical inhibition of a protein, known as acid sensing ion channel protein (ASIC1a), reduces innate fear behavior in lab animals, making normally timid...
  • News - 21 Jul 2007
    British researchers have found that people who suffer from manic depression or bipolar disorder as it is more often called, also experience a loss of brain tissue and an accelerated shrinking of their...
  • News - 26 Jun 2007
    The class of antidepressant medications known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors may be associated with an increased rate of bone loss in older men and women, according to two articles in the...
  • News - 27 Sep 2006
    An unusual and uncommon psychiatric disorder that compels people to pull out their hair is now thought to be caused by a mutant gene.
  • News - 6 Sep 2006
    More than 80% of first-year medical residents work more hours than allowed by national accreditation rules, according to two studies published on Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical...
  • News - 3 Jul 2006
    The first gene known to control the internal clock of humans and other mammals works much differently than previously believed, according to a study by Utah and Michigan researchers.
  • News - 15 Mar 2006
    Whether depressed patients will respond to an antidepressant depends, in part, on which version of a gene they inherit, a study led by scientists at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has...
  • News - 24 Feb 2006
    Deleting a specific gene in the brain has the same effect that antidepressants do in mice that have been conditioned to be depressed, report researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center.
  • News - 30 Jun 2005
    Preliminary results from a large-scale global study of people living with bipolar disorder, presented today at the World Congress of Biological Psychiatry (WCBP), found that patient satisfaction with...
  • News - 16 Mar 2005
    Patients who hear the dreaded words "you have cancer" invariably look forward to the day the doctor tells them "you're cured." But University of Florida researchers say survival often comes at its own...

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