Exact(1)
Because antidepressants significantly increase the availability of those neurotransmitters, they can spark mania in some biologically vulnerable people.
Similar(59)
Mrs. Sarkozy sparked "Carla mania" last year when she visited Britain as France's first lady, but the British press is fickle.
An unsourced note on his wikipaedia entry claims he sparked "Frimout-mania" on his return to Belgium and spoke with Prince Philippe whilst aboard Atlantis.
(Those sparked a candle mania, repercussions of which we still see in stores today).
Now that the mania sparked by the album "Buena Vista Social Club," or what Mr. Díaz Ayala calls "Cubanitis," has subsided a bit, there are clear tasks for musicologists, collectors, producers, writers and people like Mr. Díaz Ayala, who is all of those.
The experiment sparked a pendulum-mania across Europe and the United States, and crowds were attracted to observe so-called "Foucault pendulums" in major cities on both sides of the Atlantic.
Rice could be blamed for sparking the period of vampire mania that ran from the 1976 publication of her book Interview with the Vampire, to the release of the movie based on the book in 1994.
Foulke's discoveries sparked a wave of dinosaur mania in the United States.
Twelve months after his arrival sparked a Twitter meltdown and rendered the panicked assault on primogeniture a little premature, Prince George mania is thriving once again as the third-in-line celebrates his first birthday on Tuesday.
There is a spark of madness within SpongeBob that makes him hilarious and relatable; he is sweet but prone to mania and liable to go too far in support of a good cause.
Take mania.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com