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.
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Papers
Striking a Balance Between Clinical Medical School Departments and the Industry
TL;DR: With the reduction of clinical income, professional and hospital fees, and in the move from intensive inpatient services to outpatient care, academic departments find themselves unable to depend on clinical revenue streams for teaching and research infrastructure.
Differing concentrations of corticotropin-releasing factor and oxytocin in the cerebrospinal fluid of bonnet and pigtail macaques.
Leonard A. Rosenblum,Eric L. Smith,Margaret Altemus,Bruce Scharf,Michael J. Owens,Charles B. Nemeroff,Jack M. Gorman,Jeremy D. Coplan +7 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that, within the primate macaque genus, the more gregarious, affiliative, and affectively stable bonnet species would exhibit lower cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) CRF and higher CSF OT concentrations in comparison to its close relative, the temperamentally volatile and socially distant pigtail is tested.
Interactions between BDNF Val66Met polymorphism and early life stress predict brain and arousal pathways to syndromal depression and anxiety
Justine M. Gatt,Charles B. Nemeroff,Carol Dobson-Stone,Carol Dobson-Stone,Carol Dobson-Stone,Robert H. Paul,Richard A. Bryant,Richard A. Bryant,Peter R. Schofield,Peter R. Schofield,Peter R. Schofield,Evian Gordon,Andrew H. Kemp,Leanne M. Williams +13 more
TL;DR: Findings are consistent with the correlation of depression and anxiety, yet suggest that partially differentiated gene–brain cognition pathways to these syndromes can be identified, even in a nonclinical sample, and may aid establishing an evidence base for more tailored intervention strategies.
Interferon-alpha–induced changes in tryptophan metabolism: relationship to depression and paroxetine treatment
Lucile Capuron,Gabriele Neurauter,Dominique L. Musselman,David H. Lawson,Charles B. Nemeroff,Dietmar Fuchs,Andrew H. Miller +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that reduced TRP availability plays a role in IFN-alpha-induced depressive symptoms, and paroxetine, although not altering the KYN or neopterin response to IFn-alpha, attenuates the behavioral consequences ofIFN- alpha-mediated TRP depletion.