Slow wave sleep and 5-HT2 receptor sensitivity in generalised anxiety disorder: a pilot study with ritanserin
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] C. Idzikowski,et al. A dose-response study examining the effects of ritanserin on human slow wave sleep. , 1991, British journal of clinical pharmacology.
[2] P. Cowen,et al. Sleep stability with home sleep recording and automatic sleep stage analysis. , 1990, Sleep.
[3] P. Cowen,et al. Slow wave sleep and 5-HT2 receptor sensitivity during maintenance tricyclic antidepressant treatment. , 1990, Journal of affective disorders.
[4] Karl J. Friston,et al. Lithium increases slow wave sleep: possible mediation by brain 5-HT2 receptors? , 1989, Psychopharmacology.
[5] P. Cowen,et al. Increased slow wave sleep with 5-HT2 receptor antagonists: detection by ambulatory EEG recording and automatic sleep stage analysis , 1989, Journal of psychopharmacology.
[6] P. Cowen,et al. Evaluation of first night effect using ambulatory monitoring and automatic sleep stage analysis. , 1988, Sleep.
[7] D. Hoyer. Molecular pharmacology and biology of 5-HT1C receptors. , 1988, Trends in pharmacological sciences.
[8] Y. Gelders,et al. The Influence of Ritanserin, a Serotonin Antagonist, in Anxiety Disorders: A Double-blind Placebo-controlled Study versus Lorazepam , 1985, Pharmacopsychiatry.
[9] P. Rappelsberger,et al. On the search for the sources of the electroencephalogram , 1984, Neuroscience.
[10] D. Kupfer,et al. EEG sleep in outpatients with generalized anxiety: A preliminary comparison with depressed outpatients , 1983, Psychiatry Research.
[11] C. Frith,et al. Neurotic illness and its response to anxiolytic and antidepressant treatment , 1980, Psychological Medicine.
[12] J. Deakin,et al. Effects of ritanserin on aversive classical conditioning in humans , 2005, Psychopharmacology.
[13] P. Cowen,et al. Dose-related effects of selective 5-HT2 receptor antagonists on slow wave sleep in humans , 2005, Psychopharmacology.