0 very excited or anxious (= worried and nervous) in a way that causes you to be very physically active:
1 excited or anxious in a way that causes a lot of physical activity:
She was a manic talker.
These data, however, were based on self-report and did not include manic symptoms.
For both medications the predominant symptomatology was minor depressive (but not manic, mixed or schizoaffective) symptoms.
Drevets et al. (1997) have previously demonstrated increased resting metabolism in a more ventral subgenual cingulate region in manic patients.
Five retrospective studies employing life events interviews specifically examined the role of independent stressors in onsets of manic episodes.
A final potential confounding factor in the present study was overall severity of illness in manic versus depressed patients.
In those patients who required intervention for recurrence of mood symptoms, interventions for depressive symptoms predominated over manic symptoms in nearly a 3 : 1 ratio.
Somewhat more striking, however, was the close association between maternal postnatal illness of a manic nature and the likelihood of attachment security.
Such differences between patient groups show how manic subjects were more likely to ' ground out ', ending more blocks with a score of just one point.
中文繁体
十分興奮的, 躁狂的, 焦躁不安的…
More中文简体
十分兴奋的, 躁狂的, 焦躁不安的…
MoreEspañol
fuera de sí, frenético/ca [masculine-feminine, singular]…
MorePortuguês
maníaco…
More日本語
とても興奮した…
MoreTürk dili
manyakça, delice, cinnet geçirmişçesine…
MoreFrançais
surexcité/-ée, maniaque, (sur)excité…
MoreCatalan
frenètic, agitat…
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