Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
: 20 | 50 | 100
1 - 20 de 1.453
1.
PLoS One ; 19(4): e0299803, 2024.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38625877

BACKGROUND: Anxiety disorders are common and debilitating which is why treatment is so important. According to the guidelines, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has the highest level of effectiveness among psychotherapeutic treatments and is the recommended procedure. However, not everyone responds well or at all to CBT which makes a wider range of therapy options valuable. Positive Psychotherapy (PPT) comes to mind as an alternative with its strength-based approach focusing on enhancing well-being and life satisfaction. Additionally, it has not yet been extensively studied how the processes that occur during treatment sessions and between treatment sessions effect treatment outcome. Thus, to lessen the lack of evidence regarding the efficacy of PPT as an anxiety treatment the planned study examines and compares the effectiveness of CBT and PPT as well as the effect of intrasession and intersession processes of the two therapy approaches. METHOD: The study is in the planning stage and consists of an efficacy and a process study. The efficacy study is a randomized controlled comparative study of patients with anxiety disorders (generalized anxiety disorder and/or panic disorder with or without agoraphobia) with two active treatment conditions (PPT and CBT) and a control group (CG; positive psychotherapy with minimal therapeutic supervision) in an online group setting. There are three measurement time points: before treatment begins (T0), at the end of the ten-week treatment (T1), and a follow-up after three months (T2). The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of PPT and CBT in the treatment of anxiety disorders, and to compare the efficacy of online-based PPT with minimal therapeutic supervision and online-based PPT with intensive therapeutic supervision in the treatment of anxiety disorders. The process study will be used to evaluate both the intrasession processes and the intersession processes of the therapy in the two intervention groups. In addition, the process variables that predict the success of the therapy and the extent to which PPT and CBT differ in the therapy processes will be tested. The study is registered at the German Clinical Trial Register (№ DRKS00027521). DISCUSSION: To our knowledge, this is the first randomized controlled comparative study to examine the effectiveness of CBT and PPT for anxiety disorders in an online group setting.


Anxiety Disorders , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Humans , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Psychotherapy , Anxiety/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Agoraphobia/psychology , Treatment Outcome , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
2.
Psychol Med ; 53(4): 1233-1243, 2023 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37010211

BACKGROUND: Agoraphobic avoidance of everyday situations is a common feature in many mental health disorders. Avoidance can be due to a variety of fears, including concerns about negative social evaluation, panicking, and harm from others. The result is inactivity and isolation. Behavioural avoidance tasks (BATs) provide an objective assessment of avoidance and in situ anxiety but are challenging to administer and lack standardisation. Our aim was to draw on the principles of BATs to develop a self-report measure of agoraphobia symptoms. METHOD: The scale was developed with 194 patients with agoraphobia in the context of psychosis, 427 individuals in the general population with high levels of agoraphobia, and 1094 individuals with low levels of agoraphobia. Factor analysis, item response theory, and receiver operating characteristic analyses were used. Validity was assessed against a BAT, actigraphy data, and an existing agoraphobia measure. Test-retest reliability was assessed with 264 participants. RESULTS: An eight-item questionnaire with avoidance and distress response scales was developed. The avoidance and distress scales each had an excellent model fit and reliably assessed agoraphobic symptoms across the severity spectrum. All items were highly discriminative (avoidance: a = 1.24-5.43; distress: a = 1.60-5.48), indicating that small increases in agoraphobic symptoms led to a high probability of item endorsement. The scale demonstrated good internal reliability, test-retest reliability, and validity. CONCLUSIONS: The Oxford Agoraphobic Avoidance Scale has excellent psychometric properties. Clinical cut-offs and score ranges are provided. This precise assessment tool may help focus attention on the clinically important problem of agoraphobic avoidance.


Agoraphobia , Panic Disorder , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Agoraphobia/diagnosis , Agoraphobia/epidemiology , Agoraphobia/psychology , Anxiety , Anxiety Disorders , Fear , Panic Disorder/epidemiology
3.
Schizophr Res ; 250: 50-59, 2022 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36343472

BACKGROUND: The social withdrawal of many patients with psychosis can be conceptualised as agoraphobic avoidance due to a range of long-standing fears. We hypothesised that greater severity of agoraphobic avoidance is associated with higher levels of psychiatric symptoms and lower levels of quality of life. We also hypothesised that patients with severe agoraphobic avoidance would experience a range of benefits from an automated virtual reality (VR) therapy that allows them to practise everyday anxiety-provoking situations in simulated environments. METHODS: 345 patients with psychosis in a randomised controlled trial were categorised into average, moderate, high, and severe avoidance groups using the Oxford Agoraphobic Avoidance Scale. Associations of agoraphobia severity with symptom and functioning variables, and response over six months to brief automated VR therapy (gameChange), were tested. RESULTS: Greater severity of agoraphobic avoidance was associated with higher levels of persecutory ideation, auditory hallucinations, depression, hopelessness, and threat cognitions, and lower levels of meaningful activity, quality of life, and perceptions of recovery. Patients with severe agoraphobia showed the greatest benefits with gameChange VR therapy, with significant improvements at end of treatment in agoraphobic avoidance, agoraphobic distress, ideas of reference, persecutory ideation, paranoia worries, recovering quality of life, and perceived recovery, but no significant improvements in depression, suicidal ideation, or health-related quality of life. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with psychosis with severe agoraphobic avoidance, such as being unable to leave the home, have high clinical need. Automated VR therapy can deliver clinical improvement in agoraphobia for these patients, leading to a number of wider benefits.


Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Psychotic Disorders , Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy , Humans , Quality of Life , Agoraphobia/complications , Agoraphobia/therapy , Agoraphobia/psychology , Psychotic Disorders/complications , Psychotic Disorders/therapy , Psychotic Disorders/psychology
4.
Psychiatriki ; 33(3): 243-246, 2022 Sep 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35477084

Patients with Panic Disorder and / or Agoraphobia (PD +/- Ag) attribute their mental health more to external factors and less to internal, while after behavior treatment (BT) their external attributions decrease and internal attributions increase. We examined whether these cognitive changes observed at the end of BT, begin earlier. Forty patients with PD +/- Ag were assessed on the Multidimensional Health Locus of Control Scale, before and after the diagnostic and psychoeducational sessions that precede the clinical implementation of BT. Decreased health attributions to significant others (t = 4.22, p < 0.01), and an increase trend to self (t = -0.78, p = 0.43) were observed, which are compatible with the active role patients need to adopt in the clinical application of BT.


Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Panic Disorder , Agoraphobia/psychology , Agoraphobia/therapy , Cognition , Humans , Internal-External Control , Panic Disorder/psychology , Panic Disorder/therapy
5.
BMJ ; 376: e066084, 2022 01 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35045991

OBJECTIVE: To identify drug classes and individual selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) with high rates of remission and low risk of adverse events in the treatment of panic disorder with or without agoraphobia. DESIGN: Systematic review and network meta-analysis. DATA SOURCES: Embase, Medline, and ClinicalTrials.gov from inception to 17 June 2021. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA FOR STUDY SELECTION: Randomised controlled trials that included adults aged ≥18 years with a diagnosis of panic disorder, compared drugs used to treat the panic disorder, and measured the outcomes of interest, including remissions, dropouts, and adverse events. METHODS: Risk of bias in the included studies was assessed using the revised Cochrane risk of bias tool for randomised trials. Direct meta-analyses were performed using random effects models. A two stage network meta-analysis with surface under the cumulative ranking curve (SUCRA) was used to estimate the comparative efficacy of drug classes and individual SSRIs. RESULTS: 87 studies including a total of 12 800 participants and 12 drug classes were eligible for inclusion. Almost all the studies (86/87) had some concern or were at high risk of bias. Network meta-analysis of remission with consistent results indicated that tricyclic antidepressants, benzodiazepines, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, SSRIs, and serotonin-noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) were associated with significantly higher remission rates than placebo, with risk ratios of 1.39 (95% confidence interval 1.26 to 1.54), 1.47 (1.36 to 1.60), 1.30 (1.00 to 1.69), 1.38 (1.26 to 1.50), and 1.27 (1.12 to 1.45), respectively. SUCRAs identified benzodiazepines (84.5%, mean rank=2.4), tricyclic antidepressants (68.7%, 3.8), and SSRIs (66.4%, 4.0) as the top three best treatments for remission. However, tricyclic antidepressants, benzodiazepines, and SSRIs were also significantly associated with increased risk of adverse events compared with placebo, with risk ratios of 1.79 (1.47 to 2.19), 1.76 (1.50 to 2.06), and 1.19 (1.01 to 1.41), respectively. Consistency assumption of adverse events was upheld but could still be present on removal of studies with high percentages of women participants and those with agoraphobia. A SUCRA cluster ranking plot considering both remission and adverse events among all drug classes indicated that SSRIs were associated with high remission and low risk of adverse events. Among individual SSRIs, sertraline and escitalopram provided high remission with an acceptable risk of adverse events. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest that SSRIs provide high rates of remission with low risk of adverse events for the treatment of panic disorder. Among SSRIs, sertraline and escitalopram were associated with high remission and low risk of adverse events. The findings were, however, based on studies of moderate to very low certainty levels of evidence, mostly as a result of within study bias, inconsistency, and imprecision of the findings reported. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION: PROSPERO CRD42020180638.


Agoraphobia/drug therapy , Escitalopram/therapeutic use , Panic Disorder/drug therapy , Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Sertraline/therapeutic use , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Female , Humans , Induction Chemotherapy , Male , Network Meta-Analysis , Panic Disorder/psychology , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Treatment Outcome
6.
Psychol Med ; 52(1): 57-67, 2022 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32524918

BACKGROUND: Disease trajectories of patients with anxiety disorders are highly diverse and approximately 60% remain chronically ill. The ability to predict disease course in individual patients would enable personalized management of these patients. This study aimed to predict recovery from anxiety disorders within 2 years applying a machine learning approach. METHODS: In total, 887 patients with anxiety disorders (panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, agoraphobia, or social phobia) were selected from a naturalistic cohort study. A wide array of baseline predictors (N = 569) from five domains (clinical, psychological, sociodemographic, biological, lifestyle) were used to predict recovery from anxiety disorders and recovery from all common mental disorders (CMDs: anxiety disorders, major depressive disorder, dysthymia, or alcohol dependency) at 2-year follow-up using random forest classifiers (RFCs). RESULTS: At follow-up, 484 patients (54.6%) had recovered from anxiety disorders. RFCs achieved a cross-validated area-under-the-receiving-operator-characteristic-curve (AUC) of 0.67 when using the combination of all predictor domains (sensitivity: 62.0%, specificity 62.8%) for predicting recovery from anxiety disorders. Classification of recovery from CMDs yielded an AUC of 0.70 (sensitivity: 64.6%, specificity: 62.3%) when using all domains. In both cases, the clinical domain alone provided comparable performances. Feature analysis showed that prediction of recovery from anxiety disorders was primarily driven by anxiety features, whereas recovery from CMDs was primarily driven by depression features. CONCLUSIONS: The current study showed moderate performance in predicting recovery from anxiety disorders over a 2-year follow-up for individual patients and indicates that anxiety features are most indicative for anxiety improvement and depression features for improvement in general.


Depressive Disorder, Major , Panic Disorder , Phobic Disorders , Humans , Depressive Disorder, Major/psychology , Cohort Studies , Anxiety Disorders/diagnosis , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Panic Disorder/diagnosis , Panic Disorder/psychology , Agoraphobia/psychology , Biomarkers , Machine Learning
7.
Anxiety Stress Coping ; 34(3): 299-307, 2021 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33190525

BACKGROUND: How personality traits, anxiety, and depressive disorders relate longitudinally has implications for etiologic research and prevention. We sought to determine how neuroticism and extraversion relate to first-onset anxiety and depressive disorders in young adults. DESIGN: An inception cohort of 489 university freshmen was followed for 6 years. METHOD: Participants self-reported personality traits using the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire. Anxiety and depressive disorders were assessed using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule. RESULTS: Baseline neuroticism predicted first-onset panic disorder, agoraphobia, generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and major depressive disorder (MDD), while introversion predicted first-onset agoraphobia (moderate-large effects). Participants who developed panic disorder, agoraphobia, GAD, or MDD had increases in neuroticism if the disorder was current at follow-up (moderate-large effects). Participants who developed MDD but were in remission by follow-up had a moderate increase in neuroticism. CONCLUSIONS: High neuroticism in young adulthood is either a true risk factor, or marker of risk, for first-onset anxiety and depressive disorders, as is low extraversion for agoraphobia. The current data suggest large neuroticism "state" effects for panic disorder, agoraphobia, and MDD, and moderate "scar" effects from MDD. Though many clinicians and researchers regard personality traits simply as "vulnerability" factors, longitudinal analyses suggest additional complexity.


Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Personality Inventory/statistics & numerical data , Personality , Adolescent , Adult , Agoraphobia/complications , Agoraphobia/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/complications , Cohort Studies , Depressive Disorder/complications , Extraversion, Psychological , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Neuroticism , Young Adult
8.
Behav Res Ther ; 135: 103728, 2020 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32987282

BACKGROUND: Cognitive preparation plays a crucial role in CBT with exposure for panic disorder and agoraphobia. High emotional arousal while developing the exposure rationale might impair patients' cognitive capacities for processing information about treatment and impede therapeutic outcome. OBJECTIVE: This study investigates whether patients' vocally encoded emotional arousal, assessed by fundamental frequency (f0), during rationale development is associated with premature treatment dropout, insight into the rationale, and symptom reduction. METHODS: Patients' (N = 197, mean age 36.1 years, 79.2% female) f0 during rationale development was measured based on treatment videos from a randomized controlled trial of CBT for panic disorder and agoraphobia. Insight was rater assessed. Symptom severity was self- and rater assessed at the beginning and end of therapy. RESULTS: Higher f0 mean during rationale development was associated with lower probability of insight and less reduction in avoidance behavior. f0 was not associated with dropout. Insight was associated with lower probability of dropout and partially mediated the association between f0 and avoidance reduction. DISCUSSION: This study highlights the importance of emotional arousal during cognitive preparation for exposure. Therapists should ensure that patients are not too highly aroused while learning about the exposure rationale as an important step in treatment.


Agoraphobia/therapy , Arousal/physiology , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Implosive Therapy/methods , Panic Disorder/therapy , Speech Acoustics , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Avoidance Learning , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Panic Disorder/psychology , Patient Dropouts , Young Adult
9.
Medicine (Baltimore) ; 99(30): e21414, 2020 Jul 24.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32791758

Agoraphobia is frequently accompanied by panic disorder and causes considerable suffering. The aim of this study was to compare clinical features and treatment courses between patients with and without agoraphobia in panic disorder.In this retrospective study, 87 patients with panic disorder were divided into two groups depending on the presence of agoraphobia: patients with agoraphobia (PDA, n = 41) and patients without agoraphobia (PD, n = 46). Agoraphobia subscale score of the Albany Panic and Phobia Questionnaire was used to identify correlations between agoraphobia and panic and affective symptoms.The PDA group showed more severe panic and affective symptoms than the PD group. Patients with PDA were more likely to be younger at the age of onset, take benzodiazepines for longer durations, and be treated with antipsychotics augmentation. Agoraphobia subscale was associated with panic symptoms, depression, anxiety, and the duration of benzodiazepines use.The findings suggest that patients with PDA experienced more severe panic symptoms, more profound psychiatric comorbidity, and worse illness progression than those with PD.


Agoraphobia/complications , Panic Disorder/complications , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Benzodiazepines/administration & dosage , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Panic Disorder/drug therapy , Panic Disorder/psychology , Retrospective Studies , Young Adult
10.
J Nerv Ment Dis ; 208(10): 785-793, 2020 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32544125

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), a well-validated treatment for panic disorder, includes interoceptive exposures and possibly in vivo exposures to agoraphobic situations. Testing predictors and moderators of CBT outcomes can improve treatment efficacy. Sixty-six individuals with panic disorder with or without agoraphobia were randomized to panic control therapy (PCT) (n = 32) or PCT and in vivo exposures to agoraphobic situations (PCT + IV) (n = 34). Secondary analyses using multilevel models with repeated measures design revealed that individuals who displayed more interoceptive avoidance and agoraphobic avoidance fared better after PCT than PCT + IV compared with individuals who displayed less avoidance. Results suggest that these individuals benefit from concentrated doses of exposures to their primary interoceptive concerns instead of additional exposures to agoraphobic situations. Exploratory analyses were also conducted on fear, demographic factors, and clinical characteristics. Findings inform clinical decision-making and personalized medicine. Limitations include low power for detecting small effect sizes.


Agoraphobia/therapy , Avoidance Learning , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Implosive Therapy/methods , Panic Disorder/therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Female , Humans , Interoception , Male , Middle Aged , Multilevel Analysis , Panic Disorder/psychology , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
11.
J Couns Psychol ; 67(3): 337-348, 2020 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32237884

High patient emotional arousal during rationale development for in vivo exposure in CBT for panic disorder with agoraphobia might endanger comprehension of the exposure rationale. Since therapists are supposed to coregulate patients' emotions, this study investigated whether there was evidence of coregulation of vocally encoded emotional arousal, assessed by fundamental frequency (f0), during rationale development. Furthermore, the association of patient f0 stability and therapist coregulation with patients' perceived rationale plausibility was analyzed. N = 197 therapy videos-used to deduct f0-from a multicenter randomized controlled trial evaluating therapist-guided exposure on CBT outcome were analyzed post hoc. Plausibility of the exposure rationale was assessed by patients after its development. This trial-specific rating aggregates plausibility ratings for every manual component in the development of the exposure rationale and showed good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = .85). Stability in f0 and its coregulation were calculated using cross-lagged Actor-Partner Interdependence Models (APIMs), and APIM dyad estimates were associated with plausibility using linear regression analyses. Analyses indicated a relative stability in emotional arousal within both patients and therapists. Therapists' f0 had a significant effect on patients in that with therapist covariation, patients' f0 departed from their equilibrium level, while patients' f0 had no effect on therapists. Therapists' f0 covariation was positively associated with rationale plausibility. This study sheds light on interpersonal regulation mechanisms of patients' and therapists' emotional arousal during development of the exposure rationale. It suggests that coregulation of patients' emotional arousal supports patients' perceived rationale plausibility. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).


Arousal/physiology , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Emotions/physiology , Models, Psychological , Panic Disorder/psychology , Professional-Patient Relations , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Agoraphobia/therapy , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Panic Disorder/therapy
12.
J Nerv Ment Dis ; 208(7): 540-548, 2020 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32205774

Frequent attenders (FAs) of general practitioners (GPs) often complain of nonspecific physical symptoms that are difficult to define according to typical medical syndromes criteria but could be acknowledged as atypical manifestations of mental disorders. We investigated the possible correlation between somatic symptoms and panic-agoraphobic spectrum symptoms in a sample of 75 FAs of GPs in Italy, with particular attention to the impact on functional impairment. Assessments included the Patient Health Questionnaire, Panic-Agoraphobic Spectrum-Self-Report (PAS-SR) lifetime version, Global Assessment of Functioning, and Clinical Global Impression. The PAS-SR total and domains scores were significantly higher among low-functioning FAs, especially anxious somatizations, hypochondriasis, anxious expectation, and reassurance orientation domains, suggesting this undetected symptom may determine the selective attention to the physical symptoms, illness-phobic/hypochondriac elaboration, and GP frequent attendance, often aimed at searching for reassurance, leading to severe impact on overall functioning and often inefficacious treatments.


Agoraphobia/psychology , General Practitioners/standards , Medically Unexplained Symptoms , Panic Disorder/psychology , Patient Health Questionnaire/standards , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Italy , Linear Models , Male , Middle Aged , Office Visits/statistics & numerical data , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Self Report
13.
Nord J Psychiatry ; 74(6): 390-399, 2020 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31961250

Background: There is a lack of clinical studies that focus on different psychiatric disorders after trauma and the relationship with migration status.Purpose: To examine differences in psychiatric morbidity in traumatized patients referred to psychiatric treatment in Southern Oslo.Materials and methods: Hundred and ten patients with trauma background attending an outpatient clinic in Southern Oslo were studied. Forty-four of the participants (40%) were ethnic Norwegians, 25 (22.7%) had refugee background and 41 (37.3%) were first- or second-generation immigrants without refugee background. Thorough diagnostic assessment was done by experienced psychiatrists through several structured clinical interviews and self-report questionnaires.Results: Ninety-eight patients (89%) were diagnosed with at least one Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, text revision (DSM-IV-TR) disorder. There was a clear difference in the presentation of certain psychiatric disorders between the groups. Ethnic Norwegian patients were more likely to have anxiety disorders: agoraphobia, social phobia and panic disorder than non-refugee immigrant patients. They also had higher rates of alcohol abuse/dependence. Somatoform pain disorder was more common in both the refugee and other-immigrant groups than among the ethnic Norwegian patients. The refugee patients had significantly more major depressive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and both co-occurring.Conclusion: Trauma is frequently associated with depression, anxiety disorders, somatoform pain disorder and PTSD in a clinical population. The clinical presentation and comorbidity of these disorders seem to vary significantly between traumatized patients with Norwegian, refugee and non-refugee immigrant backgrounds. After a major trauma, refugees may be at greater risk for both PTSD and depression than other immigrants and the native population.


Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Population Groups/psychology , Refugees/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/epidemiology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Agoraphobia/epidemiology , Agoraphobia/psychology , Comorbidity , Depressive Disorder, Major/epidemiology , Depressive Disorder, Major/psychology , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway/epidemiology , Panic Disorder/epidemiology , Panic Disorder/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
14.
Eat Weight Disord ; 25(1): 79-86, 2020 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29766462

Eating disorders (ED) are prevalent mental illnesses composed mainly of anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorders. Anxiety disorders are another set of mental illnesses, with phobic disorder (PD) being the most prevalent disorder. ED and PD are highly comorbid. The aim of this study is to assess, in 131 individuals attending an outpatient clinic for different health issues, the level of fear related to situations generating avoidance such as in social anxiety and specific phobias according to the fear questionnaire (FQ), the level of disgust according to the disgust scale (DS-R) and the vulnerability towards ED according to the SCOFF scale to demonstrate that high levels of both fear and disgust increase the vulnerability towards ED. The study demonstrated that the level of disgust increased when fear increases (r = 0.377, p < 0.001 for the first part of the FQ; r = 0.225, p = 0.01 for the second part of the FQ). Moreover, individuals with vulnerability towards having an ED presented a higher level of disgust than individuals without this vulnerability (p = 0.009). Furthermore, individuals with vulnerability towards ED have a higher level of anxiety related to PD subtypes (p = 0.008 for agoraphobia; p = 0.001 for injection/blood phobia) as well as to social anxiety (p = 0.01), independently from having a depressive or another anxiety disorder. In the multivariate analysis, a history of psychiatric consultation has been the only significantly different parameter between individuals with or without vulnerability towards ED (p = 0.0439). Accordingly, fear and disgust are negative emotions that seem to be clinically associated which better explains the comorbidity of ED with PD. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III. Evidence obtained from well-designed cohort or case-control analytic studies, preferably from more than one center or research group.


Agoraphobia/psychology , Disgust , Fear/psychology , Feeding and Eating Disorders/psychology , Phobic Disorders/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Blood , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Injections , Lebanon , Male , Middle Aged , Phobia, Social/psychology , Young Adult
15.
Psychiatry Res ; 285: 112705, 2020 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31839417

Anxiety disorders are highly prevalent in the general population and associated with high rates of impairment and disability. This burden highlights the need to identify risk factors that individuals can modify without professional intervention. A systematic review was conducted to identify studies that examined modifiable risk and protective factors for anxiety disorders among adults in the general population. Searches were conducted in PubMed, PsycINFO and MEDLINE using medical subject headings and text words related to risk factors, protective factors, and each anxiety disorder. Screening, data extraction, and quality assessment were performed by three study authors. Modifiable risk and protective factors from 19 studies across seven countries were identified. Risk factors identified included cigarette smoking, alcohol use, cannabis use, negative appraisals of life events, avoidance, and occupational factors. Protective factors included social support, coping, and physical activity. Cigarette smoking was the most studied risk factor. Support was found for cigarette smoking as a risk factor for agoraphobia and panic disorder. Mixed results were found for generalized anxiety disorder and specific phobia. Across disorders, smoking frequency was associated with greater risk. Results indicate an important gap in the literature in that few studies have examined modifiable risk factors for anxiety disorders.


Anxiety Disorders/prevention & control , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Occupational Health/trends , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Adult , Agoraphobia/epidemiology , Agoraphobia/prevention & control , Agoraphobia/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/epidemiology , Cigarette Smoking/epidemiology , Cigarette Smoking/prevention & control , Cigarette Smoking/psychology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Panic Disorder/epidemiology , Panic Disorder/prevention & control , Panic Disorder/psychology , Prevalence , Protective Factors , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology
16.
Neuroimage Clin ; 24: 102029, 2019.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31734525

INTRODUCTION: The neurobiological mechanisms behind panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/AG) are not completely explored. The functional A/T single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs324981 in the neuropeptide S receptor gene (NPSR1) has repeatedly been associated with panic disorder and might partly drive function respectively dysfunction of the neural "fear network". We aimed to investigate whether the NPSR1 T risk allele was associated with malfunctioning in a fronto-limbic network during the anticipation and perception of agoraphobia-specific stimuli. METHOD: 121 patients with PD/AG and 77 healthy controls (HC) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using the disorder specific "Westphal-Paradigm". It consists of neutral and agoraphobia-specific pictures, half of the pictures were cued to induce anticipatory anxiety. RESULTS: Risk allele carriers showed significantly higher amygdala activation during the perception of agoraphobia-specific stimuli than A/A homozygotes. A linear group x genotype interaction during the perception of agoraphobia-specific stimuli showed a strong trend towards significance. Patients with the one or two T alleles displayed the highest and HC with the A/A genotype the lowest activation in the inferior orbitofrontal cortex (iOFC). DISCUSSION: The study demonstrates an association of the NPSR1rs324981 genotype and the perception of agoraphobia-specific stimuli. These results support the assumption of a fronto-limbic dysfunction as an intermediate phenotype of PD/AG.


Agoraphobia/genetics , Agoraphobia/physiopathology , Panic Disorder/genetics , Panic Disorder/physiopathology , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/genetics , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Alleles , Anticipation, Psychological , Female , Frontal Lobe/physiopathology , Genetic Variation , Genotype , Humans , Limbic System/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Panic Disorder/psychology , Perception , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Risk Assessment
17.
Behav Res Ther ; 120: 103443, 2019 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31374484

Both dysfunctional and self-efficacy-related cognitions are theorized as etiological and maintaining factors in agoraphobia. Exposure therapy is an effective treatment and central component of CBT for agoraphobia, but the role of changes in these cognitions as a mechanism of action has not been established. The present review aims to evaluate (a) whether exposure without cognitive interventions elicits changes in cognitive variables and (b) whether cognitive changes mediate outcomes in exposure-based treatments. We searched PsycInfo and PubMed for studies on agoraphobia (with or without panic disorder) and exposure as a treatment component. Fifteen articles with 29 relevant study arms (N = 921) were identified for a meta-analysis of cognitive changes after exposure. Seventeen articles (N = 1881) were included in a systematic narrative review of cognitive mediation. A random effects model revealed a large effect of cognitive improvement after pure exposure treatments, d = 1.02 (95% CI 0.81-1.23). The systematic review mostly supported changes in cognition as mediators of symptom change. Improved study designs and statistical methods in future mediation studies are needed to strengthen causal interpretation. Cognitive change is a probable mechanism of action in exposure therapy, especially change in self-efficacy. The present review suggests novel ways in which cognitive interventions can augment exposure therapy.


Agoraphobia/therapy , Cognition , Implosive Therapy , Self Efficacy , Agoraphobia/psychology , Humans , Prognosis
18.
J Anxiety Disord ; 67: 102109, 2019 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31430610

BACKGROUND: Reassurance seeking has been hypothesized to be a key factor in the maintenance of anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders according to contemporary cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) approaches. The present study sought to examine the structure, clinical correlates, and malleability of reassurance seeking in the context of CBT treatment. METHODS: Treatment-seeking participants (N = 738) with DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000) panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/A), social anxiety disorder (SAD), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) completed the Reassurance Seeking Scale (RSS) with other symptom measures prior to and following CBT treatment. RESULTS: A confirmatory factor analysis supported a three factor solution: the need to seek excessive reassurance regarding decisions, attachment and the security of relationships, and perceived general threat and anxiety. The RSS was moderately correlated with general measures of anxiety and depression as well as disorder-specific symptom scales. Further, CBT was found to produce changes in reassurance seeking across CBT treatments and these reductions were significantly associated with disorder-specific clinical improvement. CONCLUSION: Reassurance seeking appears to be a common factor across anxiety disorders and its reduction in CBT treatment is associated with improved clinical outcomes.


Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/psychology , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Agoraphobia/psychology , Agoraphobia/therapy , Anxiety/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Anxiety Disorders/complications , Depression/complications , Depression/psychology , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Panic Disorder/psychology , Panic Disorder/therapy , Phobia, Social/psychology , Phobia, Social/therapy , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
19.
J Affect Disord ; 257: 615-622, 2019 10 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31349178

OBJECTIVE: To minimize the burden in detecting and monitoring Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia by developing a very brief scale with selected items from the Panic Disorder Severity Scale-Self Report (PDSS-SR), and to investigate the proposed scale's psychometric properties in a comorbid sample. METHODS: A sample of 5103 patients from the Internet Psychiatry Clinic in Sweden, diagnosed and treated with Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy for panic disorder (n = 1390), social anxiety disorder (n = 1313) or depression (n = 2400), responded to the PDSS-SR. Six criteria related to factor structure, sensitivity to change and clinical representativeness were used to select items. Psychometric analyses for the selected very brief scale were performed. RESULTS: Items 2 (distress during panic attacks) and 4 (agoraphobic avoidance), were selected to create the very brief PDSS-SR version. Correlations with the full scale were high at screening, pre and post, and for change (0.87-0.93). Categorical Omega was ⍵C = 0.74. With a cut-off of 3 points, the scale could detect panic disorder in a psychiatric sample with a sensitivity of 85% and a specificity of 66%. LIMITATIONS: Limitations include lack of healthy controls and lack of blinding on secondary outcome measures. CONCLUSION: The proposed 2-item PDSS-SR version is a good candidate for a very brief panic disorder questionnaire, both for detecting cases and for measuring change. This is especially useful in clinical settings when measuring more than one condition at a time.


Panic Disorder/diagnosis , Panic Disorder/psychology , Self Report , Severity of Illness Index , Adult , Agoraphobia/psychology , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Comorbidity , Depressive Disorder , Female , Humans , Internet , Male , Mass Screening , Middle Aged , Phobia, Social , Psychometrics , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Surveys and Questionnaires
...