| Literature DB >> 25173979 |
Carrie M Potter1, Dina G Kinner2, Marisol Tellez3, Amid I Ismail4, Richard G Heimberg5.
Abstract
The occurrence of panic symptoms in various anxiety disorders has been associated with more severely impaired and difficult-to-treat cases, but this has not been investigated in dental phobia. We examined the clinical implications of panic symptoms related to sub-clinical and clinically significant dental phobia. The sample consisted of 61 patients at a university dental clinic who endorsed symptoms of dental phobia, 25 of whom met criteria for a formal diagnosis of dental phobia. Participants with dental phobia endorsed more panic symptoms than did those with sub-clinical dental phobia. In the total sample, greater endorsement of panic symptoms was associated with higher dental anxiety, more avoidance of dental procedures, and poorer oral health-related quality of life. Among those with dental phobia, certain panic symptoms exhibited associations with specific anxiety-eliciting dental procedures. Panic symptoms may serve as indicators of clinically significant dental phobia and the need for augmented treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Dental anxiety; Dental phobia; Oral health-related quality of life; Panic; Specific phobia
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25173979 DOI: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2014.07.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anxiety Disord ISSN: 0887-6185