Charles B. Nemeroff
University of Texas at Austin
1011 Papers
10.8K Citations
Charles B. Nemeroff is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Depression (differential diagnoses). The author has an hindex of 149, co-authored 979 publications. Previous affiliations of Charles B. Nemeroff include Utrecht University & University of Washington.
Chat about Author
Papers
Acute and six-month depression-related abnormalities in the sleep-wake rhythm of cardiac autonomic activity in survivors of acute coronary syndromes
Mariana N. Castro,Mariana N. Castro,Daniel Eduardo Vigo,Daniel Eduardo Vigo,Deborah R. Gustafson,Deborah R. Gustafson,I. Vila-Pérez,P. Massaro,C. García,Charles B. Nemeroff,Salvador M. Guinjoan,María Soledad Ladrón-de-Guevara +11 more
TL;DR: Depression influenced circadian rhythm of autonomic activity, most notably upon 6-month follow up, which was related to changes in HRV known to adversely affect coronary prognosis.
4
Effects of haloperidol, quinelorane, and lithium on regional neurotensin/neuromedin N concentrations: further evidence for neurotensin/neuromedin N-dopamine interactions.
Rita Clement,Dan Griff,Beth Banks,Charles B. Nemeroff,Patrick Kitabgi,Garth Bissette,Garth Bissette +6 more
TL;DR: Data indicate that the induction of NT and NMN, whose adjacent sequences are contained in a pro‐hormone product of a single gene, occurs in tandem and remains proportional, as well as demonstrating that putative D2 receptors agonists can produce effects on NT/NMN systems that are similar to D2 receptor antagonists.
3
Pharmacokinetics of growth hormone secretion in humans induced by growth hormone releasing hormone
TL;DR: This investigation compares the age- and sex-related changes in growth hormone (GH) response to growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) in normal subjects using an appropriate pharmacokinetic model and appears to be very similar for both males and females.
3
Validity and severity thresholds for the depression subscale of the affective self rating scale: An equipercentile equating study using classical test theory.
SJ Sharp,Mark Bond,KS Chiang,SJ Collier,J Farrington,T Lanza di Scalea,Charles B. Nemeroff,DJ Newport,DA Spelber,Stephen M. Strakowski,Jrc Almeida +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors validated the Affective Symptoms Scale (ASRS) against the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS-16).
3