G
Gabrielle A. Carlson
Researcher at Stony Brook University
Publications - 303
Citations - 15418
Gabrielle A. Carlson is an academic researcher from Stony Brook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bipolar disorder & Mania. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 286 publications receiving 14285 citations. Previous affiliations of Gabrielle A. Carlson include North Shore-LIJ Health System & State University of New York System.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Efficacy of paroxetine in the treatment of adolescent major depression: a randomized, controlled trial.
Martin B. Keller,Neal D. Ryan,Michael Strober,Rachel G. Klein,Stan Kutcher,Boris Birmaher,Owen R. Hagino,Harold S. Koplewicz,Gabrielle A. Carlson,Gregory N. Clarke,Graham J. Emslie,David T. Feinberg,Barbara Geller,Vivek Kusumakar,George Papatheodorou,William H. Sack,Michael Sweeney,Karen Dineen Wagner,Elizabeth B. Weller,Nancy C. Winters,Rosemary Oakes,James P. McCafferty +21 more
TL;DR: Paroxetine demonstrated significantly greater improvement compared with placebo in Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression total score < or = 8, HAM-D depressed mood item, K-SADS-L depressed Mood item, and CGI score of 1 or 2.
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Bipolar Illness in Adolescents With Major Depression: Clinical, Genetic, and Psychopharmacologic Predictors in a Three-to Four-Year Prospective Follow-up Investigation
TL;DR: All predictors were shown to have high specificity for bipolar outcome, whereas pharmacologic hypomania and symptom cluster permitted the highest confidence of prediction, 100% and 80%, respectively.
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Coping strategies, self-perceptions, hopelessness, and perceived family environments in depressed and suicidal children.
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Unmasking masked depression in children and adolescents.
TL;DR: Although children with a depressive disorder may also exhibit behavior disorders that overshadow the depression, an alert clinician conducting a thorough interview should be able to identify the "masked" depression.
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The Stages of Mania: A Longitudinal Analysis of the Manic Episode
TL;DR: The progression of symptoms during an acute manic episode was studied retrospectively in 20 bipolar manic-depressive patients whose diagnosis was reconfirmed at follow-up, and the advantages of using a longitudinal view of a psychotic episode as a diagnostic tool are discussed.