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1 a novel approach to the treatment of bipolar mania.
2 tivity or energy" as a primary criterion for mania.
3  and motivation in children at high risk for mania.
4 ion of behavioral features characteristic of mania.
5 t adolescence as the peak period of onset of mania.
6 ractive reward processing network, underlies mania.
7 he behavioral manifestations seen in bipolar mania.
8 ractivity, a frequently used animal model of mania.
9  of illness and to identify any hypomania or mania.
10  and least pervasive in bipolar disorder and mania.
11  the criterion standard for animal models of mania.
12 s known to cause switches from depression to mania.
13  to examine correlates of treatment-emergent mania.
14  recovered from mania, but 73.3% relapsed to mania.
15 et of treatment and a measure of response in mania.
16 ildhood IQ predicted increased risk of adult mania.
17 a GSK-3beta inhibitor in this mouse model of mania.
18 ar depression without increasing the risk of mania.
19            (2) Medical conditions that mimic mania.
20  optimal blood levels for treatment of acute mania.
21 ed at the most severe levels of hypomania or mania.
22 ng-episode duration, and chronicity of child mania.
23 ed to treatment and the rate of switching to mania.
24 xed), and 38.7% +/- 28.8% of these were with mania.
25 achieving remission from an episode of acute mania.
26 indings from a first such study of late-life mania.
27 erity who are likely to be treated for acute mania.
28  were more frequently studied than for acute mania.
29 ure, as well as efficacy in a mouse model of mania.
30  depression may reflect differential risk of mania.
31 cantly higher risk of incident and recurrent mania.
32 r characterized by periods of depression and mania.
33 ted the effects of recent stressors on adult mania.
34 tient treatment, such as active psychosis or mania.
35 chronic recurrent episodes of depression and mania.
36 apy was associated with an increased risk of mania.
37 nts during bipolar mixed states or dysphoric manias.
38  individual were used to compare the rate of mania 0-3 months and 3-9 months after the start of antid
39 sedation (7.7%) in the open-label period and mania (11.9% of the placebo group compared with 4.0% of
40 for depression, 1.83 (95% CI=1.72-1.94); for mania, 4.35 (95% CI=3.67-5.16); for delirium, confusion,
41 tress responsivity are prominent symptoms of mania, a behavioral state common to schizophrenia and bi
42 group had a better outcome compared with the mania absent and chronic mania groups (12-point and 8-po
43 owed 2 discontinuities demarcating 3 groups: mania absent, episodic mania, and chronic mania (manic/h
44  and/or a history of postpartum psychosis or mania according to DSM or ICD criteria or the Research D
45 D), which is characterized by depression and mania, affects 1-2% of the world population.
46                                 Psychosis or mania after childbirth is a psychiatric emergency with r
47 l phenotypes reminiscent of aspects of human mania, ameliorated by antimania drugs lithium and valpro
48 tween methylphenidate and treatment-emergent mania among patients with bipolar disorder who were conc
49 -naive adolescents in their first episode of mania and 17 healthy subjects underwent diffusion tensor
50 es of the dimensions and factor structure of mania and bipolar depression and (2) longitudinal studie
51 f isolated behaviors and domains involved in mania and bipolar disorder will ultimately inform moveme
52 ing the dopamine synthesis and/or release in mania and DAT blockade in bipolar depression.
53 cious than placebo in the treatment of acute mania and demonstrated a rapid onset of action.
54               Hazard ratios were similar for mania and depression events (0.30 and 0.33, respectively
55 and is required to mediate endophenotypes of mania and depression in rodents.
56 iscoveries of pharmacological treatments for mania and depression several decades ago, relatively lit
57 hat are often used to manage the episodes of mania and depression that characterize bipolar disorder.
58                      Separate inheritance of mania and depression together with high rates of clinica
59 te depressive episodes and in prophylaxis of mania and depression, and lamotrigine in prophylaxis (re
60 t of bipolar disorders to prevent relapse of mania and depression, but many patients do not have a re
61 ten abstracted by separate animal models for mania and depression.
62 sease characterized by recurrent episodes of mania and depression.
63 at is characterized by recurrent episodes of mania and depression.
64 tric illness marked by recurrent episodes of mania and depression.
65 is characterized by intermittent episodes of mania and depression; without treatment, 15% of patients
66                                     Although mania and hypomania define bipolar disorder, depressive
67 essive disorder; depression more common than mania and hypomania in bipolar disorders; trait mood lab
68 ed as a coprimary symptom, the prevalence of mania and hypomania was reduced.
69 ntified in the DSM-5 as cardinal symptoms of mania and hypomania.
70 t onset as manic, major depressive, or both (mania and major depression in the same onset year).
71               Self-reported ages at onset of mania and major depression were used to code polarity at
72  opposite to the direction seen in bipolar I mania and may therefore be state dependent, the observed
73 ely ill patients with schizophrenia, bipolar mania and MDD compared with controls (P<0.01).
74 re was no evidence for cross-transmission of mania and MDEs (OR=.7, CI:.5-1.1), psychosis and mania (
75 ns of neural activation predict the onset of mania and other mood disorders in high-risk children.
76 careful definition and follow-up of emerging mania and partial remission.
77 FRN as a biological vulnerability marker for mania and pathological risk-taking.
78 ar spectrum features, including items on the mania and psychosis subscales of the Psychiatric Diagnos
79  as a previously unrecognized model of human mania and reveal an important role for CLOCK in the dopa
80                                      Bipolar mania and schizophrenia are recognized as separate disor
81 e lack of distinct endophenotypes of bipolar mania and schizophrenia has complicated the development
82 ls into question an accepted animal model of mania and should help to develop more accurate human and
83 hase of a unitary psychosis transitioning to mania and then dementia.
84  stability to mitigate recurrent episodes of mania and/or depression.
85 SM-5 criterion would alter the prevalence of mania and/or hypomania.
86  anxiety/depression, affective lability, and mania (and with a parent with older age at mood disorder
87 demarcating 3 groups: mania absent, episodic mania, and chronic mania (manic/hypomanic >1 year).
88 antisocial PD), thought disorder (psychosis, mania, and cluster A PDs), somatoform (somatoform disord
89 f symptoms, including psychosis, depression, mania, and cognitive deficits.
90     Co-occurring substance abuse, psychosis, mania, and cognitive impairment were exclusionary.
91  of schizophrenia, elevated in bipolar (hypo)mania, and contextually misallocated in the positive sym
92  for Cck in the development and treatment of mania, and describe some of the molecular mechanisms by
93 stent with findings in bipolar I depression, mania, and euthymia, suggesting a physiologic trait mark
94 all of which investigated verapamil in acute mania, and finding no evidence that it is effective.
95 r current episode duration, preponderance of mania, and high rates of ultradian rapid cycling and com
96 rn is the risk for mood switch to hypomania, mania, and mixed states.
97 gy, low maternal warmth predicted relapse to mania, and more weeks ill with manic episodes was predic
98 red communication of temporal lobe epilepsy, mania, and Wernicke's aphasia-compared to the sparse spe
99  anxiety/depression, affective lability, and mania are important predictors of new-onset bipolar spec
100 ability, personality changes, psychosis, and mania are less common but equally distressing symptoms t
101  Psychiatric disorders such as addiction and mania are marked by persistent reward seeking despite hi
102  duration of manic diagnoses, using onset of mania as baseline date, was 79.2 +/- 66.7 consecutive we
103 valproate, the drugs presently used to treat mania associated with BD, rescued the hyperactive phenot
104              We included patients with acute mania associated with bipolar I disorder.
105  to determine the risk of treatment-emergent mania associated with methylphenidate, used in monothera
106                                              Mania at onset occurred at a later age on average than m
107                                              Mania at onset substantially increased the genetic linka
108 gely reflected relative pairs concordant for mania at onset, which occurred significantly more freque
109 d four unmedicated participants with bipolar mania (BM) (n = 30), bipolar depression (BD) (n = 30), b
110  (BPD), 30 with current bipolar hypomania or mania (BPM), 15 bipolar euthymic (BPE), and 30 healthy c
111  the hyperarousal symptoms characteristic of mania but who lack the well-demarcated periods of elevat
112       During follow-up, 87.8% recovered from mania, but 73.3% relapsed to mania.
113  is critical to rapid stabilization of acute mania, but estimates of the target therapeutic level hav
114 iffer in time to recurrence of depression or mania, but patients in FFT-A spent fewer weeks in depres
115 ood and/or grandiosity), to avoid diagnosing mania by symptoms that overlapped with those for attenti
116                           Treatment-emergent mania can have substantial negative impact on overall mo
117 predicted faster relapse after recovery from mania (chi(2) = 13.6, P =.0002), and psychosis predicted
118  exhibit impulsive responding, such as ADHD, mania, chronic substance abuse and schizophrenia.
119 th and onset of several disorders, including mania, confirm multiple case reports and results of smal
120 c or mixed phase) with at least one cardinal mania criterion (i.e., euphoria and/or grandiosity) to e
121  schizophrenia; and IL-1RA levels in bipolar mania decreased.
122 tioning on individual to compare the rate of mania (defined as hospitalization for mania or a new dis
123  assessed the incidence rates of depression, mania, delirium, panic disorder, and suicidal behaviors
124                        Patients with bipolar mania demonstrated a unique exploratory pattern, charact
125 nge, 0.66-0.70) were dimensional measures of mania, depression, anxiety, and mood lability; psychosoc
126 re was time to recurrence of any mood event (mania, depression, or a mixed episode).
127 cluding suicide, suicide attempt, psychosis, mania, depression, panic disorder, and delirium, confusi
128     The components represented dimensions of mania, depression, positive symptoms, anxiety, negative
129 those in the other two groups, and new-onset mania developed in 2 patients in the tDCS group.
130 erience recurrent episodes of depression and mania, disrupting normal life and increasing the risk of
131  switches in mood polarity into hypomania or mania during acute and continuation trials of adjunctive
132 at least one of the two cardinal symptoms of mania (elated mood and/or grandiosity), to avoid diagnos
133 gnostically heterogeneous disorder, although mania emerges as a distinct phenotype characterized by e
134 th any mood episodes and 39.6% of weeks with mania episodes, during 8-year follow-up.
135 llele was significantly associated with the "mania" factor, in particular the subdimension "overactiv
136 Given the markedly increased hazard ratio of mania following methylphenidate initiation in bipolar pa
137 s that have been shown to best differentiate mania from ADHD (i.e., elation, grandiosity, flight of i
138 ere was a nearly 2-fold increase in rates of mania from ages 13-14 to 17-18 years.
139             The evidence for independence of mania from depression warrants additional scrutiny in th
140 of first-lifetime onset postpartum psychosis/mania from population-based register studies of psychiat
141 e compared with the mania absent and chronic mania groups (12-point and 8-point difference on GAF).
142                           Diagnosis of child mania has been contentious.
143 difficult to represent in animals, models of mania have begun to decode its fundamental underlying ne
144    Due to increased impulsivity and risk for mania, however, depressed individuals with bipolar disor
145 kDelta19) have been identified as a model of mania; however, the mechanisms that underlie this phenot
146 r probability of recovery from an episode of mania (HR = 1.713; 95% CI, 1.373-2.137; P < .001), hypom
147  postpartum period, with a focus on managing mania, hypomania, and the psychotic components of the il
148 tly achieved recovery, time to recurrence of mania, hypomania, mixed state, or a depressive episode w
149 episode do not support the splitting between mania/hypomania and depression); family history, major d
150 polarity were observed for family history of mania/hypomania and multiple past mood episodes.
151                                  Duration of mania/hypomania showed 2 discontinuities demarcating 3 g
152  disorder rather than to stronger effects of mania/hypomania than depression.
153                       MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mania/hypomania with or without depression among those w
154 e psychosis to mood disturbance, duration of mania/hypomania, depression, and psychosis) and 10-year
155 e failure to evaluate the workplace costs of mania/hypomania.
156 irment of cognitive function, depression, or mania; impairment of reproductive and sexual function; a
157 ne was effective in the treatment of bipolar mania in adolescent patients.
158 icantly reduce the frequency and severity of mania in bipolar disorder, and cost increases are modest
159 lity is a diagnostic indicator for pediatric mania in bipolar disorder.
160 ontain genes influencing the age at onset of mania in bipolar disorder.
161 shold switches to full-duration hypomania or mania in both acute and long-term continuation treatment
162 re are limited data on the manifestations of mania in general community samples of adolescents.
163               This is highly consistent with mania in humans.
164 t to share face and predictive validity with mania in humans.
165 orrelates associated with treatment-emergent mania in patients receiving adjunctive antidepressant tr
166 nic risk score and the clinical dimension of mania in SCZ patients.
167 hm in patients with first-onset psychosis or mania in the postpartum period.
168  the YMRS items predicted treatment-emergent mania in this sample: increased motor activity, speech,
169  profile that is strikingly similar to human mania, including hyperactivity, decreased sleep, lowered
170 evel of valproate for best response in acute mania is above 94 microg/ml.
171                  A first hospitalization for mania is associated with a period of recovery from comor
172                                              Mania is characterised by increased impulsivity and risk
173 pha activity in the ventral midbrain induced mania-like behavior in association with a central hyperd
174 al NAC phase signaling may contribute to the mania-like behavioral manifestations that result from di
175 r gross neural circuit function and generate mania-like behaviors in Clock-Delta19 mice.
176  5alphaR mediates a number of psychosis- and mania-like complications of SD through imbalances in cor
177  of either irritability or short episodes of mania-like symptoms in youth.
178 ther irritability or short-lived episodes of mania-like symptoms is still small.
179 en with short (less than 4 days) episodes of mania-like symptoms seem to progress to classical (Type
180 re chronic irritability or short episodes of mania-like symptoms, are common, impairing and a topic o
181 ith severe irritability or short episodes of mania-like symptoms.
182 1), and IL-1 receptor antagonist (p value in mania &lt; .001 and euthymia = .021) were significantly ele
183 s: mania absent, episodic mania, and chronic mania (manic/hypomanic >1 year).
184 individual patterns of activity suggest that mania may be better characterized by differences in robu
185 of symptoms of depression or of hypomania or mania, measured by the Inventory of Depressive Symptomat
186 ategories based on symptomatic presentation--mania, melancholia and paranoia--all derived from the be
187 es are remission, subsyndromal and syndromal mania, mixed states or depression.
188 cation (excluding patients with hypomania or mania, mixed symptoms, or rapid cycling).
189 face validity of the MSN strain as a complex mania model, adding sexual dimorphism, an altered diurna
190 ach involves analysis of naturally occurring mania models including an inbred strain our lab has rece
191                                The principal mania models involve transgenic manipulations or treatme
192 of schizophrenia (N=65), bipolar disorder or mania (N=37), depressive psychosis (N=39), or other psyc
193 ld switches into full-duration hypomania and mania occurred in 11.4% and 7.9%, respectively, of the a
194 gnificantly higher risks of both first-onset mania (odds ratio (OR) for abuse: 2.23; 95% confidence i
195 nfluences the risk for psychotic features in mania of bipolar disorder patients.
196 in the placebo group) or hospitalization for mania (one in each group).
197 etime bipolar I or II disorder and 1.7%, for mania only.
198 ate of mania (defined as hospitalization for mania or a new dispensation of stabilizing medication) 0
199 ed events were psychosis, severe depression, mania or agitation, hallucinations, sleep disturbance, a
200 or mania symptom load at the study entry and mania or depression symptom severity at the 3-month foll
201 ifferentiate between disturbances related to mania or depression, which is necessary to understand th
202 with an increased risk of treatment-emergent mania or hypomania (0.926 [0.576-1.491], p=0.753), but 5
203 d significantly higher rates of subthreshold mania or hypomania (13.3% compared with 1.2%), manic, mi
204  and psychosis predicted more weeks ill with mania or hypomania (F(1,80) = 12.2, P =.0008).
205 (N=45), and those who had treatment-emergent mania or hypomania (N=46).
206 ts spent 56.9% +/- 28.8% of total weeks with mania or hypomania (unipolar or mixed), and 38.7% +/- 28
207 tment-emergent affective switch (a switch to mania or hypomania early in the course of treatment) wer
208  There were 7 episodes of treatment-emergent mania or hypomania, 5 occurring in the combined treatmen
209 onse, clinical remission, treatment-emergent mania or hypomania, and tolerability (using dropout rate
210 ts with major depression predicted new-onset mania or hypomania.
211 sodes of major depression and in episodes of mania or hypomania.
212 iated with antidepressant treatment-emergent mania or hypomania.
213 with an increased risk of treatment-emergent mania or hypomania.
214 relative to healthy participants, those with mania or mixed mania would (1) exhibit incremental decre
215 rred within the first postpartum month, with mania or psychosis having an earlier onset than depressi
216 reatment: 2.10; CI=1.55, 2.83) and recurrent mania (OR for abuse: 1.55; CI=1.00, 2.40; OR for maltrea
217 a and MDEs (OR=.7, CI:.5-1.1), psychosis and mania (OR=1.0, CI:.4-2.7) or psychosis and MDEs (OR=1.0,
218 OR)=2.9, confidence interval (CI): 1.1-7.7), mania (OR=6.4, CI: 2.2-18.7) and MDEs (OR=2.0, CI: 1.5-2
219 ere strikingly similar to those of the human mania phenotype and may thus serve as a valid mouse mode
220 tion of the dopamine transporter matched the mania phenotype better than the effects of amphetamine,
221                 The clinical significance of mania plus depression as demonstrated by a 1 in 5 suicid
222 , more rare but severe complications such as mania, psychotic symptoms, or delirium need individual p
223                                    The Young Mania Rating Scale (for manic symptoms) and the Clinical
224 on Rating Scale (MADRS) (range, 0-60), Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) (range, 0-44), Social and Occu
225 y of Depressive Symptomatology and the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) at baseline and bimonthly inte
226 linician-Rated Version (IDS-C) and the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) were administered at each visi
227 ton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) and Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) were used to evaluate clinical
228 hange from baseline to endpoint in the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS), using the last-observation-ca
229 n Rating Scale for Anxiety (HRSA), and Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS).
230         Efficacy was assessed with the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS).
231 ween baseline and change scores on the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS; range 0-60) up to 3 weeks for
232 r mixed episode of bipolar I disorder (Young Mania Rating Scale [YMRS] total score < or =12 and 21-it
233  Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and Young Mania Rating Scale at baseline and week 14.
234 valuated by removing the 5 overlapping Young Mania Rating Scale items, a significant sex effect persi
235 ) or bipolar II disorder (22.5%) and a Young Mania Rating Scale score > or =14 entered open treatment
236 ania was defined at a given visit as a Young Mania Rating Scale score of 12 or higher and an Inventor
237                    Improvement in mean Young Mania Rating Scale total score (adjusted for covariates)
238 ean baseline-to-endpoint change in the Young Mania Rating Scale total score was significantly greater
239 hange from baseline to endpoint in the Young Mania Rating Scale total score was the primary outcome m
240  an adverse effects questionnaire, the young mania rating scale, and cognitive assessment.
241  Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, Young Mania Rating Scale, and Global Assessment of Functioning
242 (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, Young Mania Rating Scale, and Global Assessment of Functioning
243 ypical Depression Supplement (SIGH-ADS), the Mania Rating Scale, and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Ind
244 ent in manic symptoms, assessed by the Young Mania Rating Scale, was also observed, in addition to ot
245 essive symptomatology self-report, and young mania rating scale.
246 y of Depressive Symptomatology and the Young Mania Rating Scale.
247 -endpoint change in total score on the Young Mania Rating Scale.
248 ilton Depression Rating Scale, and the Young Mania Rating Scale.
249 rief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and the Young Mania Rating Scale.
250 significantly correlated with improvement in mania ratings.
251 SD) can trigger or exacerbate psychosis- and mania-related symptoms; the neurobiological basis of the
252                                           On mania-related tests, BAG1 TG mice recovered much faster
253 nitial severity range in patients with acute mania remains unclear.
254 ith depression and 50.9% of respondents with mania reporting severe role impairment.
255 =108) of the sample experienced hypomania or mania, resulting in revision of diagnoses for 12.2% to b
256 he Parent General Behavior Inventory-10 Item Mania Scale (PGBI-10M)) at a mean of 14.2 months follow-
257 (the Clinician-Administered Rating Scale for Mania score) was also lower in the group treated with su
258 m was associated with a greater reduction in mania scores over 9 weeks.
259 teresting dispositional phenomena related to mania seen in MSN mice.
260 istory of childhood maltreatment had greater mania severity (six studies, 780 participants; odds rati
261 en groups in treatment-emergent hypomania or mania (six patients in the modafinil group and five in t
262 e relationship between antidepressant use or mania symptom load at the study entry and mania or depre
263                               Differences in mania symptom profiles between investigative groups may
264 use was associated with significantly higher mania symptom severity at the 3-month follow-up.
265 2.09, P = .04) and the time with significant mania symptoms (19.2 vs 24.7 weeks; F(1) = 6.0, P = .01)
266 tion significantly reduced the mean level of mania symptoms (z = 2.09, P = .04) and the time with sig
267                 NCAN preferentially affected mania symptoms in humans.
268  systematic care interventions effective for mania symptoms.
269 oor to fair for all cardinal and noncardinal mania symptoms.
270 identify defining characteristics of bipolar mania that are distinct from those of schizophrenia.
271 3beta) was studied in a novel mouse model of mania that has recently been validated with several clin
272 depressants did not induce more switching to mania (the event rate for antidepressants was 3.8% and f
273 rugs are effective in the acute treatment of mania; their efficacy in the treatment of depression is
274                       In patients with acute mania, this inhibitory deficit has been correlated with
275 cts of adolescents in their first episode of mania to address whether abnormalities are present in ea
276     The increased risk of treatment-emergent mania was confined to patients on antidepressant monothe
277                                              Mania was defined by DSM-IV criteria, with at least one
278 oms at baseline with subsequent hypomania or mania was determined in survival analyses using Cox prop
279 atients taking mood stabilizers, the risk of mania was lower after starting methylphenidate (hazard r
280  mood stabilizer, no acute change in risk of mania was observed during the 3 months after the start o
281 ed studies of divalproex treatment for acute mania was performed to test a hypothesized linear relati
282 ATPase alpha3 Myshkin (Myk/+) mouse model of mania was performed.
283                          However, no risk of mania was seen in patients receiving an antidepressant w
284                          The age at onset of mania was significantly heritable in these families.
285 first episodes, second and third episodes of mania were characterized by psychosis, daily (ultradian)
286 were observed when only hospitalizations for mania were counted.
287  their index major depressive episode and/or mania were divided into residual vs asymptomatic recover
288 eficits in patients with bipolar disorder or mania were less pervasive but evident in performance sco
289 with depression alone, whereas correlates of mania were similar among those with mania with or withou
290 of full-duration hypomania [> or =7 days] or mania) were blindly assessed by using clinician-rated da
291 on of mood symptoms have stronger effects on mania, whereas treatments that emphasize cognitive and i
292 haviors of children at high and low risk for mania while they anticipate and respond to reward and lo
293 isk of delirium/confusion/disorientation and mania, while younger patients were at higher risk of sui
294 increased dopaminergic neurotransmission and mania, whilst increased striatal dopamine transporter (D
295 nal study of 86 subjects with intake episode mania who were all assessed at 6, 12, 18, 24, 36, and 48
296                        Twelve-month rates of mania with and without depression were 2.2% and 1.3%, re
297 ether with high rates of clinical overlap of mania with anxiety and substance use disorders provide a
298                                              Mania with depression was associated with a greater numb
299 lates of mania were similar among those with mania with or without depression.
300 lthy participants, those with mania or mixed mania would (1) exhibit incremental decrements in sustai

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