Literature DB >> 9476739

Delineating a putative phobic-anxious temperament in 126 panic-agoraphobic patients: toward a rapprochement of European and US views.

G Perugi1, C Toni, A Benedetti, B Simonetti, M Simoncini, C Torti, L Musetti, H S Akiskal.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The current US official position, since DSM-III, is that panic attacks represent the hallmark of panic disorder and play a major role in the development of the agoraphobic syndrome. The more favoured view in the European tradition is that neurotic personality and/or prodromal features such as mild depression and excessive worries precede the illness.
METHOD: We studied 126 consecutive cases of panic disorder with or without agoraphobia by DSM-III-R criteria, evaluated by relevant structured and semi-structured interviews.
RESULTS: We provide evidence that characterological and prodromal antecedents represent a putative phobic-anxious temperamental substrate occurring in at least 30% of our sample. This temperament consists of three or more of the following traits: (1) increased sympathetic activity with repeated sporadic and isolated autonomic manifestations; (2) marked fear of illness; (3) hypersensitivity to separation; (4) difficulty to leave familiar surroundings; (5) marked need for reassurance; (6) oversensitivity to drugs and substances. Our data further suggest that these attributes are of familial origin, as a result of which the illness tends to declare itself earlier. LIMITATION: The present investigation is largely correlational without a prospective component; however, the key validating familial data were obtained blindly.
CONCLUSION: Our data support a pathogenetic model whereby genetic diathesis unfolds from subclinical to clinical manifestations along temperamental, panic, phobic and avoidant patterns. We submit that the delineation of the phobic-anxious temperament will be useful in more completely charting the life course of the panic-agoraphobic spectrum; avoidant and dependent (Axis II) patterns appear more distal in the pathogenetic chain and, in many cases, can be conceptualized to be epiphenomenal to the disease process.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9476739     DOI: 10.1016/s0165-0327(97)00108-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Affect Disord        ISSN: 0165-0327            Impact factor:   4.839


  4 in total

Review 1.  Epidemiology of personality disorders.

Authors:  N Sater; J F Samuels; O J Bienvenu; G Nestadt
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2001-02       Impact factor: 5.285

2.  Temperament in adolescents with anxiety and depressive disorders and in their families.

Authors:  Gabriele Masi; Maria Mucci; Letizia Favilla; Paola Brovedani; Stefania Millepiedi; Giulio Perugi
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2003

Review 3.  Diagnosis and treatment of agoraphobia with panic disorder.

Authors:  Giulio Perugi; Franco Frare; Cristina Toni
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 5.749

4.  The clinical-familial correlates and naturalistic outcome of panic-disorder-agoraphobia with and without lifetime bipolar II comorbidity.

Authors:  Cristina Toni; Giulio Perugi; Franco Frare; Giuseppe Tusini; Konstantinos N Fountoulakis; Kareen K Akiskal; Hagop S Akiskal
Journal:  Ann Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2008-11-13       Impact factor: 3.455

  4 in total

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