Sensitization to early life stress and response to chemical odors in older adults
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Biological Psychiatry
- Vol. 35 (11) , 857-863
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0006-3223(94)90021-3
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Symptom and personality profiles of young adults from a college student population with self-reported illness from foods and chemicals.Journal of the American College of Nutrition, 1993
- Self-reported Illness from Chemical Odors in Young Adults without Clinical Syndromes or Occupational ExposuresArchives of environmental health, 1993
- One brief exposure to a psychological stressor induces long-lasting, time-dependent sensitization of both the cataleptic and neurochemical responses to haloperidolLife Sciences, 1992
- An olfactory-limbic model of multiple chemical sensitivity syndrome: Possible relationships to kindling and affective spectrum disordersBiological Psychiatry, 1992
- Amphetamine or haloperidol 2 weeks earlier antagonized the plasma corticosterone response to amphetamine; evidence for the stressful/foreign nature of drugsPsychopharmacology, 1992
- One experience with ‘lower’ or ‘higher’ intensity stressors, respectively enhances or diminishes responsiveness to haloperidol weeks later: implications for understanding drug variabilityBrain Research, 1991
- Does kindling model anything clinically relevant?Biological Psychiatry, 1990
- One stressful event blocks multiple actions of diazepam for up to at least a monthBrain Research, 1988
- Time‐dependent sensitization as the cornerstone for a new approach to pharmacotherapy: Drugs as foreign/stressful stimuliDrug Development Research, 1988
- Interchangeability of Stress and Amphetamine in SensitizationScience, 1980