| Literature DB >> 21813084 |
Liviu Bunaciu1, Matthew T Feldner, Kimberly A Babson, Michael J Zvolensky, Georg H Eifert.
Abstract
An emerging pattern of results from panic-relevant biological challenge studies suggests women respond with greater subjective anxiety than men, but only to relatively abrupt and intense challenge procedures. The current investigation examined the relation between biological sex and self-reported anxious reactivity following biological challenges of varying durations and intensity. Participants were 285 (152 females; M(age) = 21.38; SD = 5.92) nonclinical adults who completed one of three protocols: a 3-min voluntary hyperventilation challenge (VH), a 5-min 10% carbon dioxide-enriched air (CO(2)) challenge, or a 25-s 20% CO(2) challenge. As predicted, results indicated that the 20% CO(2) challenge elicited greater self-reported anxiety than the VH and 10% CO(2) challenges. Moreover, women endorsed greater anxious reactivity than men, but only following the 20% CO(2) challenge. Results are discussed in terms of processes likely to account for sex differences in anxious reactivity following relatively abrupt and intense biological challenges. Copyright ÂEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21813084 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbtep.2011.07.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry ISSN: 0005-7916