Influenza patients between ages 10 and 17 who took Tamiflu were 54 percent more likely to exhibit serious abnormal behavior than those who did not take the antiflu drug, according to ...
California sea lion fetuses exposed to toxic algae on the rise in their habitats may develop seizures and abnormal behavior later in life, a study of lab rodents has found.
... test battery with alpha-CaMKII mutant mice, an animal model of schizophrenia.. These mice showed abnormal behaviors similar to those of schizophrenic patients. Next, the team found the dentate gyrus ...
... same gene promotes "helicopter mom" behavior in mice. The gene, known as stathmin or oncoprotein ... normal mice typically build nests.
The abnormal behavior, concludes Shumyatsky, is based on the mouse ...
... animals, the Tel Aviv University scientists have developed a model to identify and understand abnormal behavior. The model is, in effect, a reference database that gives mental health practitioners a ...
... disorder, Prof. Hendler is also paving the way for new types of treatment. "Current drugs treat the abnormal behavior, not the brain disorder that is causing the behavior," she says, "We want to be ...
... models of the disease. "Giving a chemical inhibitor of GSK3B to these mice completely reversed their abnormal behavior," Tsai said.
DISC1 works by directly inhibiting the activity of GSK3B, a target ...
... This increased the levels of D-serine in the mice and therefore its effectiveness in treating the abnormal behaviors in this animal model that may be relevant to schizophrenia.
"We still do not have ...
... .
Lee N. Robins, who pioneered the field of psychiatric epidemiology,
which looks at the roots of abnormal behavior, and who played a key
role in determining the prevalence of mental problems in the ...
... Wishard Health Services encountered an individual with diabetes who, according to family members, was exhibiting abnormal behavior. Once the paramedics found the patient's blood sugar to be within ...
A while back I wrote about the possible adaptive function of somnambulism or sleep-walking. Well...I've come up with yet another hypothesis addressing an "abnormal" behavior falling under parasomnia.