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Great Depression Subject

History events and time periods such as World War II, the Great Depression, treatment of Native Americans, and America s break from British rule. Historical events may be written about from many perspectives, and can be used to make points about a variety of subjects. The Depression, for example, was an economic event that had many factors, including human emotion (fear). [Pg.59]

The combination of pentazocine with the antihistamine tripelennamine results in a combination known to drug abusers as T s and blues. This combination produces heroinlike subjective effects, and heroin addicts use it in the absence of heroin. In addition, the use of pentazocine in combination with alcohol or barbiturates greatly enhances its sedative and respiratory depressant effects. [Pg.325]

Polvgraphic sleep studies with antidepressants have traditionally been of great interest since certain forms of depression are characterized by common features in the sleep polygram (very short REM sleep latency, i.e. time until appearance of first REM phase frequent sleep interruptions) and it was found that many antidepressants affect the sleep pattern of healthy subjects in the opposite way to that observed in endogenous depression (Vogel et al., 1990). Typically, many antidepressants lead to a dose-dependent prolongation of REM latency and an overall reduction in the duration of REM sleep. However,... [Pg.81]

It takes no great imagination to grasp the suffering of a patient condemned to even a relatively mild tardive akathisia for a lifetime. I have seen cases of this kind that were previously mistaken for severe anxiety or agitated depression. Chapter 3 reviewed research indicating that acute akathisia can drive a patient into psychosis and to violence and/or suicide. Considering the millions of patients subjected to this torment, the problem takes on epidemic proportions. [Pg.71]

Because dispersion and repulsion potentials between two partners fall off so rapidly with distance the binding energy depends very much upon the shape of the surface. For example, a molecule bound at the centre of a hemispherical cavity of radius Zq (Fig. 13a) is subject to a dispersion potential 4 times as great as for a molecule located on a smooth surface [31]. Inside a long, narrow capillary, terminated by a hemisphere at whose centre the molecule is located (Fig. 13b) the attractive potential is roughly 7 times that of a plane surface [31]. Inside a topographic depression a bound molecule is in close contact with a larger number of atoms than on a smooth surface. [Pg.46]


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