Clomipramine
Mostrando 13-20 de 20 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. Effects of psychotropic drugs on canine cerebral metabolism and circulation related to EEG--diazepam, clomipramine, and chlorpromazine.
The effects of diazepam, clomipramine, and chlorpromazine upon cerebral metabolism and blood flow were examined separately in 18 dogs. After the administration of diazepam or clomipramine, cerebral cortical oxygen consumption (CMRO2) decreased significantly by a maximum of 17% and 13% of control within 10 minutes and 15 minutes, and returned to control at 12
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14. Clomipramine and neuroleptic malignant syndrome: Authors' reply
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd..
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15. Thrombosis of cerebral veins following intravenous application of clomipramine.
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16. Clomipramine induced neuroleptic malignant syndrome and pyrexia of unknown origin
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd..
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17. Clomipramine and neuroleptic malignant syndrome: Literature on adverse reactions to psychotropic drugs continues to confuse
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd..
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18. The stiff-man syndrome: new pathophysiological aspects from abnormal exteroceptive reflexes and the response to clomipramine, clonidine, and tizanidine.
Neurophysiological investigations of a patient suffering from the stiff-man syndrome revealed that exteroceptive reflexes, in particular those elicited from the skin, were excessively enhanced. In contrast, no abnormalities were found within the monosynaptic reflex arc. Clomipramine injection severely aggravated the clinical symptoms whereas diazepam, clonid
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19. Levo(−) amphetamine and dextro(+) amphetamine in the treatment of narcolepsy
The narcoleptic syndrome is a life-long and sometimes familial disorder in which there is a disturbance of the rapid eye movement phase of sleep. Patients with periodic sleep in the daytime but no other symptoms seldom develop the narcoleptic syndrome and have a separate unrelated disorder. Twelve patients with the narcoleptic syndrome were treated separatel
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20. Fatal toxicity of antidepressant drugs in overdose.
A fatal toxicity index (deaths per million National Health Service prescriptions) was calculated for antidepressant drugs on sale during the years 1975-84 in England, Wales, and Scotland. The tricyclic drugs introduced before 1970 had a higher index than the mean for all the drugs studied (p less than 0.001). In this group the toxicity of amitriptyline, dibe