https://doi.org/10.7490/f1000research.1110151.1
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Quintana D, Westlye L, Rustan Ø et al. Low dose oxytocin delivered intranasally with Breath Powered Device affects social-cognitive behavior: a randomized 4-way crossover trial with nasal cavity assessment  [version 1; not peer reviewed]. F1000Research 2015, 4:398 (poster) (https://doi.org/10.7490/f1000research.1110151.1)
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Low dose oxytocin delivered intranasally with Breath Powered Device affects social-cognitive behavior: a randomized 4-way crossover trial with nasal cavity assessment 

Daniel Quintana1, Lars Westlye, Øyvind Rustan, Natalia Tesli, Claire Poppy, Hanne Smevik, Martin Tesli, Marianne Røine, Ramy Mahmoud, Knut Smerud, Per Djupesland, Ole Andreassen
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Published 27 Jul 2015

Low dose oxytocin delivered intranasally with Breath Powered Device affects social-cognitive behavior: a randomized 4-way crossover trial with nasal cavity assessment 

[version 1; not peer reviewed]

Daniel Quintana1, Lars Westlye, Øyvind Rustan, Natalia Tesli, Claire Poppy, Hanne Smevik, Martin Tesli, Marianne Røine, Ramy Mahmoud, Knut Smerud, Per Djupesland, Ole Andreassen
Author Affiliations
1 University of Oslo, Norway
Presented at
70th Society of Biological Psychiatry Annual Meeting 2015
Abstract
Competing Interests

PGD is an employee of OptiNose AS, Oslo, Norway and owns stock and stock options in OptiNose. RAM is an employee of OptiNose US, Yardley, PA, USA and owns stock and stock options in OptiNose. OAA has received speaker’s honoraria from GSK, Lundbeck and Otsuka for work not directly relevant to the submitted manuscript. MT has received speaker’s honorarium from Medivir for work not directly relevant to the submitted manuscript. MR and KTS are employed (and KTS owner) by Smerud Medical Research International AS, a CRO receiving fees for clinical trial services from OptiNose AS. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.

Keywords
oxytocin, social cognition, intranasal
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