excited delirium
0 sources
excited delirium
Summary
excited delirium is a pseudoscience[1]. It draws 347 Wikipedia views per month (pseudoscience category, ranking #6 of 15).[2]
Key Facts
- excited delirium is in the country of United States[3].
- excited delirium's instance of is recorded as pseudoscience[4].
- excited delirium's instance of is recorded as fictional medical condition[5].
- excited delirium's subclass of is recorded as corporate propaganda[6].
- excited delirium's subclass of is recorded as delirium[7].
- excited delirium's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02pqp4w[8].
- excited delirium's symptoms and signs is recorded as psychomotor agitation[9].
- excited delirium's symptoms and signs is recorded as delirium[10].
- excited delirium's symptoms and signs is recorded as sweating[11].
- excited delirium's symptoms and signs is recorded as superhuman strength[12].
- excited delirium's has cause is recorded as sexual intercourse[13].
- excited delirium's sponsor is recorded as Axon Enterprise[14].
- excited delirium's facet of is recorded as police[15].
- excited delirium's has effect is recorded as death[16].
- excited delirium's BBC Things ID is recorded as b2080fe7-887b-47ca-8eae-f090ce4152d9[17].
- excited delirium's drug or therapy used for treatment is recorded as (RS)-ketamine[18].
- excited delirium's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1848465[19].
- excited delirium's risk factor is recorded as African Americans[20].
- excited delirium's theorized by is recorded as Vincent Di Maio[21].
- excited delirium's theorized by is recorded as Charles V. Wetli[22].
- excited delirium's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as medicine-and-dentistry/excited-delirium[23].
- excited delirium's ScienceDirect topic ID is recorded as neuroscience/excited-delirium[24].
- excited delirium's WikiProjectMed ID is recorded as Hyperactive delirium with severe agitation[25].
Why It Matters
excited delirium draws 347 Wikipedia views per month (pseudoscience category, ranking #6 of 15).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]