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1  change in amygdala reactivity is related to mood change.
2 d hippocampal volume increase independent of mood change.
3 l mechanisms underlying the light associated mood changes.
4 neural mechanisms underlying light-dependent mood changes.
5 inly depressive and mixed symptoms and rapid mood changes.
6 re associated with poorer outcomes and rapid mood changes.
7 cluded skin and ocular dryness, fatigue, and mood changes.
8 abdominal cramping, dizziness, headache, and mood changes.
9 scales for desire to use cocaine now and for mood changes.
10 s was modulated by individual differences in mood change across the DEP drink day, where subjects who
11 c symptoms, and emphasizing core features of mood change and alterations in cognitive content and psy
12 icipation of pain can in its own right cause mood changes and behavioral adaptations that exacerbate
13      Increased activity and energy alongside mood change are identified in the DSM-5 as cardinal symp
14 odifications of pathways mediating transient mood changes are present in unipolar depression independ
15 s of irritability, nervousness, and frequent mood changes but not of feeling "blue." The effect of be
16 hat peaked between 4 and 12 weeks, preceding mood change by 4 weeks.
17                             Ratings of acute mood change during serotonergic challenge were compared
18  could contribute to drug- or stress-induced mood changes in people and support the hypothesis that a
19 ork hours contribute to stress, fatigue, and mood changes in trainee physicians that are potentially
20   The purpose of this study was to determine mood changes in women with a parental history of alcohol
21 hat mediators of continuing ketamine-induced mood changes include altered timing and amplitude of the
22 -term monitoring of dementia progression and mood changes is worth further investigation.
23  shift towards a Th2-cytokine balance and to mood changes related to the immunoendocrine state.
24 ssociated with the menopausal transition and mood changes seen during this period may affect many wom
25                Other common symptoms such as mood changes, sleep disturbances, urinary incontinence,
26 linical changes, such as sleep disorders and mood changes, sometimes reported by human users of the s
27 al responses to negative stimuli and induces mood changes toward positive states.
28 rsened following TPD (relative to within-day mood change under BAL conditions) also showed lower acti
29 xecutive slowing, forgetfulness, dysarthria, mood changes, urinary symptoms, and short-stepped gait.
30 e possible association of that incident with mood changes using pre- and postdisaster data.
31                                              Mood changes were assessed using the Positive and Negati
32 tenderness, spotting, pelvic discomfort, and mood changes) were mild and short-lived.

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