Literature DB >> 23953867

Bowel and bladder-control anxiety: a preliminary description of a viscerally-centred phobic syndrome.

Sunjeev K Kamboj1, Christine Langhoff1, Rosanna Pajak1, Alex Zhu1, Agnes Chevalier1, Sue Watson1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: People with anxiety disorders occasionally report fears about losing control of basic bodily functions in public. These anxieties often occur in the absence of physical disorder and have previously been recognized as "obsessive" anxieties reflecting a preoccupation with loss of bowel/bladder control. Motivated by our observations of the non-trivial occurrence of such anxieties in our clinical practice we sought to fill a gap in the current understanding of "bowel/bladder-control anxieties".
METHOD: Eligible participants completed an internet survey.
RESULTS: Bowel/bladder-control anxieties (n = 140) tended to emerge in the mid to late 20s and were associated with high levels of avoidance and functional impairment. There was a high prevalence of panic attacks (78%); these were especially prevalent among those with bowel-control anxiety. Of those with panic attacks, 62% indicated that their main concern was being incontinent during a panic attack. Significantly, a proportion of respondents (~16%) reported actually being incontinent during a panic attack. Seventy percent of participants reported intrusive imagery related to loss of bowel/bladder control. Intrusion-related distress was correlated with agoraphobic avoidance and general role impairment. Some differences were noted between those with predominantly bowel-, predominantly bladder- and those with both bowel and bladder-control anxieties.
CONCLUSION: This preliminary characterization indicates that even in a non-treatment seeking community sample, bowel/bladder-control anxieties are associated with high levels of distress and impairment. Further careful characterization of these anxieties will clarify their phenomenology and help us develop or modify treatment protocols in a way that takes account of any special characteristics of such viscerally-centred phobic syndromes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bladder-control anxiety

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23953867     DOI: 10.1017/S1352465813000726

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Cogn Psychother        ISSN: 1352-4658


  4 in total

1.  Intrusive memories and voluntary memory of a trauma film: Differential effects of a cognitive interference task after encoding.

Authors:  Alex Lau-Zhu; Richard N Henson; Emily A Holmes
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2019-04-25

2.  Experimental single-session imagery rescripting of distressing memories in bowel/bladder-control anxiety: a case series.

Authors:  Rosanna Pajak; Sunjeev K Kamboj
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2014-12-15       Impact factor: 4.157

3.  Bowel and Bladder Anxiety: An Obsession or a Variant of Agoraphobia?

Authors:  Debjit Roy; Amrita Sarkar; Arvind Nongpiur; Manoj Prithviraj
Journal:  Indian J Psychol Med       Date:  2018 May-Jun

4.  Development and validation of the Shy Bladder and Bowel Scale (SBBS).

Authors:  Simon R Knowles; Jason Skues
Journal:  Cogn Behav Ther       Date:  2016-06
  4 in total

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