Literature DB >> 10599481

Early childhood predictors of adult anxiety disorders.

J Kagan1, N Snidman.   

Abstract

This paper considers the influence of temperamental factors on the development of anxious symptoms in children and adolescents. About 20 percent of healthy children are born with a temperamental bias that predisposes them to be highly reactive to unfamiliar stimulation as infants and to be fearful of or avoidant to unfamiliar events and people as young children. Experiences act on this initial temperamental bias and, by adolescence, about one-third of this group is likely to show signs of serious social anxiety. These children are also likely to have one or more biological features, including a sympathetically more reactive cardiovascular system, asymmetry of cortical activation in EEG favoring a more active right frontal area, more power in the EEG in the higher frequency range, and a narrower facial skeleton. The data imply that this temperamental bias should be conceptualized as constraining the probability of developing a consistently fearless and spontaneous profile rather than as determining an anxious or introverted phenotype.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10599481     DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3223(99)00137-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0006-3223            Impact factor:   13.382


  65 in total

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Review 8.  The developmental psychopathology of worry.

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Review 9.  Worry and generalized anxiety disorder: a review and theoretical synthesis of evidence on nature, etiology, mechanisms, and treatment.

Authors:  Michelle G Newman; Sandra J Llera; Thane M Erickson; Amy Przeworski; Louis G Castonguay
Journal:  Annu Rev Clin Psychol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 18.561

10.  Frontal Electroencephalogram Asymmetry and Temperament Across Infancy and Early Childhood: An Exploration of Stability and Bidirectional Relations.

Authors:  Grace Z Howarth; Nicole B Fettig; Timothy W Curby; Martha Ann Bell
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