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1.
The study objectives were to determine comorbidity rates for various subtypes of specific phobia (SP) in a sample of patients with the principal diagnosis of panic disorder with agoraphobia (PDA) and to examine the possible etiologic relatedness of these SP subtypes to PDA. Ninety consecutive day clinic patients with PDA were administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) modified for DSM-IV. The overall comorbidity rate for SP was 65.6%. The most frequent subtypes of SP were situational phobia and dental phobia, followed by natural environment phobia, phobia of funerals, cemeteries, dead bodies, and other death-related phenomena and objects (referred to as death-related phobia), and blood-injection-injury phobia. Except for death-related phobia, other subtypes of SP clearly tended to precede the onset of PDA, often by many years. The smallest difference between the age of onset for PDA and particular subtypes of SP (temporal distance) was found for death-related phobia, whereas the temporal difference was longer for situational phobia, hospital phobia, and blood-injection-injury phobia. The frequency and temporal distance data suggest that death-related phobia may constitute a risk factor for developing PDA or that it is a prodrome of PDA, whereas situational phobia, hospital phobia, and blood-injection-injury phobia appear to predispose to PDA to a lesser degree. Of the three broadly conceived groups of SP, mutilation phobias (which include death-related phobia, hospital phobia, blood-injection-injury phobia, and dental phobia) appear most etiologically relevant for PDA, with the group of situational phobias (which also includes the natural environment subtype of SP) being less relevant, and animal phobias showing a negligible etiologic relatedness to PDA.  相似文献   

2.
The age of onset, other background data, and measures from behavioral avoidance tests were studied in 370 phobic patients. They belonged to six different categories: agoraphobia (n?=?100), social phobia (n?=?80), claustrophobia (n?=?40), animal phobia (n?=?50), blood phobia (n?=?40), and dental phobia (n?=?60). Results showed that animal phobia had the earliest onset age (7 years), followed by blood phobia (9 years), dental phobia (12 years), social phobia (16 years), claustrophobia (20 years), and agoraphobia (28 years). The groups also differed in marital and occupational status, heart rate, anxiety experiences during the behavioral test, and general fearfulness. On the whole, agoraphobia and animal phobia stood out as the extremes on many measures. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

3.
Studied the clinical manifestations of social phobia in a diagnosed sample of 21 social phobics (aged 21–53 yrs). Social phobia was found to be a chronic and pervasive condition affecting a variety of life areas and producing significant emotional distress. In a 2nd study, individuals with a diagnosis of social phobia or avoidant personality disorder were compared using a subsample of 10 socially phobic Ss and a sample of 8 Ss with avoidant personality disorder (aged 30–60 yrs). Although physiological reactivity and cognitive content were essentially the same for both groups in a number of situational tasks, those Ss with a diagnosis of avoidant personality disorder were found to be more sensitive interpersonally, and exhibited significantly poorer social skill than did the social phobic Ss. Results are discussed in relation to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III) criteria for social phobia, the significance of social phobia as a clinical syndrome, and the research and treatment implications of the difference found between individuals with a diagnosis of social phobia and those with avoidant personality disorders. (19 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

4.
This study compared 96 women and 58 men suffering from panic disorder with agoraphobia. Participants completed questionnaires assessing various clinical features associated with panic disorder with agoraphobia (PDA), general adjustment, and drug/alcohol use. Results showed that PDA is a more severe condition in women. Women reported more severe agoraphobic avoidance when facing situations or places alone, more catastrophic thoughts, more body sensations, and higher scores on the Fear Survey Schedule. Also, women more often had a comorbid social phobia or posttraumatic stress disorder. The lower agoraphobic avoidance of men was associated with their alcohol use. However, there were no differences between genders in other dimensions, including depression, situational and trait anxiety, stressful life events, social self-esteem, marital adjustment, and drug use.  相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: The authors assessed DSM-III-R disorders among American former prisoners of war. Comorbidity, time of onset, and the relationship of trauma severity to complicated versus uncomplicated posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were examined. METHOD: A community sample (N=262) of men exposed to combat and imprisonment was assessed by clinicians using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R. RESULTS: The rates of comorbidity among the men with PTSD were lower than rates from community samples assessed by lay interviewers. Over one-third of the cases of lifetime PTSD were uncomplicated by another axis I disorder; over one-half of the cases of current PTSD were uncomplicated. PTSD almost always emerged soon after exposure to trauma. Lifetime PTSD was associated with increased risk of lifetime panic disorder, major depression, alcohol abuse/dependence, and social phobia. Current PTSD was associated with increased risk of current panic disorder, dysthymia, social phobia, major depression, and generalized anxiety disorder. Relative to PTSD, the onset of the comorbid disorders was as follows: major depression, predominantly secondary; alcohol abuse/dependence and agoraphobia, predominantly concurrent (same year); social phobia, equal proportions primary and concurrent; and panic disorder, equal proportions concurrent and secondary. Trauma exposure was comparable in the subjects with complicated and uncomplicated PTSD. CONCLUSIONS: The types of comorbid diagnoses and their patterns of onset were comparable to the diagnoses and patterns observed in other community samples. The findings support the validity of the PTSD construct; PTSD can be distinguished from comorbid disorders. Uncomplicated PTSD may be more common than previous studies suggest, particularly in clinician-assessed subjects exposed to severe trauma.  相似文献   

6.
The literature on social phobia is reviewed in this article. Social phobia has undergone considerable diagnostic evolution to reach its present form in DSM-IV. Its differential diagnosis includes panic disorder with agoraphobia, avoidant personality disorder, depression, and "shyness." Cross-cultural issues are important to consider because the disorder may manifest differently in different cultures and social settings. It is common, with a lifetime prevalence of 13.3% in the United States according to recent epidemiological studies. Underrecognition of social phobia remains an issue of concern. Comorbidity with other psychiatric disorders, including other anxiety disorders, depression, alcohol abuse, and personality disorders, frequently occurs. Current conceptualizations of the etiology of social phobia reflect psychodynamic theories and evidence from family and genetic studies, neurobiological research, and neuroimaging. Drugs such as monoamine oxidase inhibitors, selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors, benzodiazepines, and beta3-adrenergic blockers have proven to be efficacious, as has cognitive-behavioral treatment, including group approaches.  相似文献   

7.
89 patients meeting Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III) criteria for anxiety disorders were administered a battery of self-report inventories, including the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Beck Depression Inventory, an obsessive-compulsive inventory, the Cornell Medical Index—Health Questionnaire, and the Fear Survey Schedule. The validity of the DSM-III subgroups of anxiety states and phobias was substantiated. However, the results indicate that agoraphobia was more similar to the anxiety state than the phobia group, where it is presently classified. The anxiety state group was highly homogenous. On the other hand, the phobia group showed some degree of heterogeneity. Findings are discussed in terms of the validity of DSM-III subcategories of phobias and anxiety states, the reclassification of agoraphobia as an anxiety state, and whether phobias should be included in the anxiety disorders category. (17 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVES: To review the major community-based epidemiological studies that have reported data on anxiety disorders in individuals aged 65 and over and to examine age-related changes in their prevalence and incidence. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SELECTION: All English language entries relating to anxiety in the BIDS, EMBASE, Medline and PsychLit computerized databases, together with a search of relevant citations. DATA SYNTHESIS: The prevalence of phobic disorders in the population aged 65 or over lies between 0.7% and 12% over a 1-6-month period. As the rates for social phobia, 1%, and simple phobia, 4%, are fairly consistent, much of this variation is due to agoraphobia, whose prevalence lies between 1.4% and 7.9%. The prevalence of obsessive-compulsive disorder is 0.1-0.8%, panic disorder 0.1% and generalized anxiety 4%. Women do have a higher prevalence of anxiety disorders than men but this difference diminishes with increasing age, as does the apparent prevalence of all anxiety disorders apart from generalized anxiety, measured without hierarchical rules, which appears to be maintained or increase. The relative importance of various explanations for this apparent reduction is discussed, including the three that are of greatest public health and clinical importance: cohort effects, anxiety-related mortality and comorbidity between anxiety and cognitive impairment. A tri-dimensional approach (psychic, somatic and behavioural) to anxiety measurement is advocated in order to facilitate future studies of age-related changes which may lead to a reappraisal of the status of generalized anxiety as a 'residual category'.  相似文献   

9.
Blood-injection-injury (BII) phobics and spider phobics show markedly different cognitive, psychophysiological, and motoric reactions to activating stimuli. These observations have led theorists to question whether the emotion of fear mediates both phobias. The present study examined the role of disgust and disgust sensitivity in these subtypes of specific phobia. BII phobics, spider phobics, and nonphobics completed questionnaires and rated pictures of specific objects on fear and disgust scales. Questionnaire data indicated that phobic participants were higher than nonphobics on fear, and also on disgust sensitivity. The reaction of BII phobics to pictures of medical stimuli was one of disgust, rather than fear. The reaction of spider phobics to pictures of spiders was a combination of fear and disgust, though fear appeared to predominate. Results are discussed in view of current theories of emotional factors in specific phobia.  相似文献   

10.
The present study was carried out to explore the relation between BII phobia and dental phobia. An additional aim was to determine the fainting tendency of dental phobics and BII phobics during an invasive treatment procedure. Participants were 63 patients undergoing treatment in a dental fear clinic, and 173 patients undergoing dental surgery in a university hospital. They completed measures on fears of particular medical and dental stimuli, fainting history, general trait anxiety, dental anxiety, BII anxiety, BII avoidance, and a questionnaire aimed to define a phobia based on DSM-IV criteria. Immediately after treatment information was obtained on exposures to blood or injections, state anxiety, and feelings of faintness during treatment. The results did not indicate any significant relationship between measures of dental anxiety and BII anxiety or BII avoidance. However, 57% of the dental phobic patients could also be classified as BII phobic. The proportion of dental phobics who reported fainting episodes in their past was similar to that of the BII phobics (37%), but none of the participants fainted during treatment. It is concluded that, albeit the level of co-occurrence for both types of phobias is high, dental phobia should be considered as a specific phobia, independent for the BII subtype within DSM-IV. Further, the findings are inconsistent with the notion that individuals with BII phobia have a remarkably high tendency to faint in the presence of their phobic stimuli.  相似文献   

11.
Disgust has been proposed as a possible factor in phobic acquisition and maintenance, particularly in spider phobia. Cognitions and processes concerning disgust were examined in a series of studies with spider phobics, other specific phobics and nonphobic controls. Beliefs about the disgusting nature of their phobic objects were present in phobics but did not contribute to an attentional bias. Measures of global disgust sensitivity were not closely linked to the phobic fear response. The disgust associated with phobic objects appears to have different constituents to the disgust associated with objects that do not evoke the phobic response. In the light of evidence presented here, it seems unlikely that disgust plays a central role in the aetiology or maintenance of spider phobia in particular and specific phobias in general. It is proposed that when stimuli normally associated with disgust become the focus of phobic anxiety the disgust response may be amplified.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: The co-occurrence of anxiety disorders with other mental, addictive, and physical disorders has important implications for treatment and for prediction of clinical course and associated morbidity. METHOD: Cross-sectional and prospective data on 20,291 individuals from the Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) study were analysed to determine one-month, current disorders, one-year incidence, and one-year and lifetime prevalence of anxiety, mood, and addictive disorders, and to identify the onset and offset of disorders within the one-year prospective period. RESULTS: Nearly half (47.2%) of those meeting lifetime criteria for major depression also have met criteria for a comorbid anxiety disorder. The average age of onset of any lifetime anxiety disorder (16.4 years) and social phobia (11.6 years) among those with major depression was much younger than the onset age for major depression (23.2 years) and panic disorder. CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety disorders, especially social and simple phobias, appear to have an early onset in adolescence with potentially severe consequences, predisposing those affected to greater vulnerability to major depression and addictive disorders.  相似文献   

13.
The present study was designed to examine the operation of depression-specific biases in the identification or labeling of facial expression of emotions. Participants diagnosed with major depression and social phobia and control participants were presented with faces that expressed increasing degrees of emotional intensity, slowly changing from a neutral to a full-intensity happy, sad, or angry expression. The authors assessed individual differences in the intensity of facial expression of emotion that was required for the participants to accurately identify the emotion being expressed. The depressed participants required significantly greater intensity of emotion than did the social phobic and the control participants to correctly identify happy expressions and less intensity to identify sad than angry expressions. In contrast, social phobic participants needed less intensity to correctly identify the angry expressions than did the depressed and control participants and less intensity to identify angry than sad expressions. Implications of these results for interpersonal functioning in depression and social phobia are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

14.
Social phobia and avoidant personality disorder (APD) may be given as comorbid diagnoses. However, it is not known if the labels provide independent, useful diagnostic information. The authors classified social phobics by social phobia subtype and presence of APD. Generalized social phobics with and without APD (ns?=?10 and 10) and nongeneralized social phobics without APD (n?=?10) were distinguished on measures of phobic severity. The generalized groups also showed earlier age at onset and higher scores on measures of depression, fear of negative evaluation, and social anxiety and avoidance than did the nongeneralized group. APD criteria of general timidity and risk aversion were more frequently endorsed by social phobics with AD. The data suggest that both the generalized subtype of social phobia and the presence of APD do provide useful diagnostic information, but the additional diagnosis of APD may simply identify a severe subgroup of social phobics. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

15.
In a 1st study, 60 phobic volunteer Ss reacted psychophysiologically with greater vigor to imagery of their own phobic content than to other fearful or nonaffective images. Imagery heart rate responses were largest in Ss with multiple phobias. For simple (dental) phobics, cardiac reactivity was positively correlated with reports of imagery vividness and concordant with reports of affective distress; these relationships were not observed for social (speech) phobics. In a 2nd study, these phobic volunteers were shown to be similar on most measures to an outpatient clinically phobic sample. In an analysis of the combined samples, fearful and socially anxious subtypes were defined by questionnaires. Only the fearful subtype showed a significant covariation among physiological responses, imagery vividness, and severity of phobic disorder. This fearful–anxious distinction seems to cut across diagnostic categories, providing a heuristic perspective from which to view anxiety disorders. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

16.
Twenty-six girls with a clinical spider phobia and 26 matched control girls were interviewed about conditioning, modeling, and negative information experiences in connection with spiders. In addition, parents of the phobic girls were independently interviewed about the origins of their child's phobia. Phobic children more often reported aversive conditioning experiences with spiders than did control children. Also, in a number of cases, conditioning events described by the phobic children were confirmed by their parents, a result that replicates the findings of Merckelbach, Muris and Schouten (1996; Behaviour Research and Therapy, 34, 935-938). Taken together, the results contradict a strong version of the non-associative account of phobias and suggest that in at least some cases, conditioning events may contribute to the development of (childhood) spider phobia.  相似文献   

17.
The presence of Axis I and Axis II disorders in 71 social phobic patients was examined. Generalized anxiety disorder was the common secondary Axis I disorder, followed by simple phobia. Avoidant personality disorder and obsessive-compulsive personality disorder were the most common Axis II diagnoses, and 88% of the sample exhibited features of these 2 personality styles. Ss with additional Axis I diagnoses were more anxious and depressed than those with no additional Axis I disorder. Social phobics with additional Axis II disorders were more depressed but not more anxious than those with no Axis II diagnosis. Furthermore, those with an additional Axis I disorder had higher scores on measures of neuroticism, interpersonal sensitivity, and agoraphobia. The prevalence and impact of additional Axis I and II disorders on the etiology, maintenance, and treatment outcome for persons with social phobia are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

18.
Blushing is the most prominent symptom of social phobia, and fear perception of visible anxiety symptoms is an important component of cognitive behavioral models of social phobia. However, it is not clear how physiological and psychological aspects of blushing and other somatic symptoms are linked in this disorder. The authors tested whether social situations trigger different facial blood volume changes (blushing) between social phobic persons with and without primary complaint of blushing and control participants. Thirty social phobic persons, 15 of whom were especially concerned about blushing, and 14 control participants were assessed while watching an embarrassing videotape, holding a conversation, and giving a talk. Only when watching the video did social phobic persons blush more than controls blushed. Social phobic persons who complained of blushing did not blush more intensely than social phobic persons without blushing complaints but had higher heart rates, possibly reflecting higher arousability of this subgroup. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

19.
Divided phobias into 2 nonexhaustive groupings—animal phobias and situation phobias. Three hypotheses were tested: (a) animal phobics will use more obsessional defenses, whereas situation phobics will use more hysterical defenses; (b) animal phobics will show greater psychological differentiation than situation phobics, and (c) situation phobics will show greater physiognomic sensitivity than animal phobics. Ss consisted of 36 severely phobic adults, 18 of each type. Both the Defense Mechanism Inventory and the Holtzman Inkblot Technique were used to measure defenses. The Hidden Figures Test was used to measure psychological differentiation and the Physiognomic Cue Test was used to measure physiognomic sensitivity. The results confirm 2 of the 3 hypotheses. Phobic types showed significant differences in the use of ego defense mechanisms, as predicted. Animal phobics were significantly more field independent than situation phobics, as predicted. Factor analysis yielded 4 nameable factors, 2 of which differentiated the 2 phobic groups. Results suggest that phobias cannot be viewed as a single neurotic entity. (26 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

20.
Investigated the fears and personality traits of 225 individuals (mean age 32.5 yrs) experiencing 1 of 4 phobic conditions—agoraphobia, claustrophobia, social phobia, or some other specific phobia. Several Fear Survey Schedule variables and the personality scales of the Guilford-Zimmerman Temperament Survey were factor analyzed. Five factors were extracted that were consistent with previous findings, which were related to each of 4 independent variables: Treatment Subgroup, Diagnosis, Age, and Sex. Clinic and private clients did not differ significantly on any factor, nor did age account for any meaningful change in factor scores. The diagnostic groups scored discrepantly on 2 factors: Social Activity and Cognitive Introversion, and Fear of Sensory Stimuli. Females differed significantly from males on Femininity and Miscellaneous Fears. Results are discussed in terms of past research and possible ramifications for the clinical practice of behavior therapy. (French abstract) (35 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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