Literature DB >> 8379553

Agoraphobia without panic: clinical reappraisal of an epidemiologic finding.

E Horwath1, J D Lish, J Johnson, C D Hornig, M M Weissman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In the United States, the consensus among clinicians and researchers, reflected in DSM-III-R, is that agoraphobia is a conditioned response to panic attacks and almost never occurs without panic attacks. The predominant view in the United Kingdom is that agoraphobia frequently occurs in the absence of panic. While clinicians report that they rarely see patients with agoraphobia who have no history of panic disorder, community studies report that agoraphobia without panic disorder is common. For example, the Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) study found that 68% of 961 persons with agoraphobia had no history of panic attacks or disorder.
METHOD: To understand this discrepancy, 22 subjects who had been diagnosed as having agoraphobia without panic disorder or panic attacks in the ECA study were blindly reinterviewed 7-8 years later with the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia--Lifetime Version Modified for the Study of Anxiety Disorders; data from these interviews were blindly reviewed by a research psychiatrist who was not involved in the original data collection or the reinterview process.
RESULTS: On reappraisal, 19 of the 22 subjects had simple phobias or fears but not agoraphobia. One subject had probable agoraphobia without panic attacks, one had definite panic disorder with agoraphobia, and one had probable agoraphobia with limited symptom attacks.
CONCLUSIONS: Epidemiologic studies that used the Diagnostic Interview Schedule and lay interviewers, such as the ECA study, may have over-estimated the prevalence of agoraphobia without panic. Agoraphobia without panic attacks occurs but is uncommon, and the diagnostic boundary between agoraphobia and simple phobia is unclear.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8379553     DOI: 10.1176/ajp.150.10.1496

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0002-953X            Impact factor:   18.112


  5 in total

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2.  Personality disorder traits as predictors of subsequent first-onset panic disorder or agoraphobia.

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5.  A comparison of DSM-5 and DSM-IV agoraphobia in the World Mental Health Surveys.

Authors:  Annelieke M Roest; Ymkje Anna de Vries; Carmen C W Lim; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Dan J Stein; Tomasz Adamowski; Ali Al-Hamzawi; Evelyn J Bromet; Maria Carmen Viana; Giovanni de Girolamo; Koen Demyttenaere; Silvia Florescu; Oye Gureje; Josep Maria Haro; Chiyi Hu; Elie G Karam; José Miguel Caldas-de-Almeida; Norito Kawakami; Jean Pierre Lépine; Daphna Levinson; Maria E Medina-Mora; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Siobhan O'Neill; Marina Piazza; José A Posada-Villa; Tim Slade; Yolanda Torres; Ronald C Kessler; Kate M Scott; Peter de Jonge
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  5 in total

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