| Literature DB >> 2482973 |
W Maier1, R Rosenberg, N Argyle, R Buller, M Roth, S Brandon, O Benkert.
Abstract
Avoidance behaviour and secondary major depression are both frequent in clinical samples of patients with panic disorder. Their status is unclear: indicators of severity of panic disorder or indicators of separate psychiatric disorders. Among the data of the Cross-National Collaborative Panic Study (n = 1,168) we found that especially avoidance behaviour defines more severe states of panic disorder (earlier age at onset, higher frequency of panic attacks and higher level of psychopathology); co-occurrence of major depression is less clearly associated with more severe panic disorder. The results are compatible with the DSM-III-R concepts of comorbidity of panic disorder and major depression and of subtyping panic disorder by avoidance behaviour.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1989 PMID: 2482973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Dev ISSN: 0262-9283