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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A sample of 890 people aged 65 years and over living at home in the Lewisham and North Southwark Health District was interviewed using a structured schedule containing CARE organic brain syndrome and depression scales, and items dealing with anxiety symptoms. Total prevalence rates were 4.6% for cognitive impairment, 13.5% for depression, 3.7% for generalised anxiety, and 10.0% for phobic disorders. Cognitive impairment increased exponentially with age, and was associated with lower occupational class. There was no significant association between occupational class and depression, generalised anxiety, or phobic disorder in this sample. Cognitive impairment, depression and agoraphobia were associated with significantly higher levels of dependency in the tasks of daily living.
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PMID:The Guy's/Age Concern survey. Prevalence rates of cognitive impairment, depression and anxiety in an urban elderly community. 261 41

A cause-and-effect relation between panic attacks and agoraphobia is an accepted concept. It is believed that, left unchecked, a subgroup of patients with panic attacks will consistently develop agoraphobia. However, to date, there are no means for early identification of this at-risk group. This study analyzed patients with panic attacks and phobic avoidance behaviors by using population-based, survey-collected data. Path analysis was used to determine relations among panic symptoms, phobic behaviors, panic-phobic lag times, and measures of pervasiveness and severity of fears and panic. Panic-related chest pain, dyspnea, trembling, and fear were important factors in the development, pervasiveness, and severity of situational fears and anticipatory anxiety. However, full-blown agoraphobia was only related to the presence of anticipatory anxiety and the pervasiveness of phobic avoidance behaviors. Although the age-of-onset of panic and phobic avoidance was unrelated to other factors, lag times were dependent upon panic symptomatology and the presence of depression. These findings suggest that patients with panic attacks who are at risk for agoraphobia can be identified by the nature of their panic symptoms, and perhaps, through early treatment, the development of phobic avoidance can be averted.
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PMID:Factors in the panic-agoraphobia transition. 275 May 61

This paper examines the nosological and aetiological relationships of panic disorder to the anxiety states and depression. The phenomenology is detailed from an unbiased sample of 90 cases selected, on the basis of meeting positive criteria for panic disorder, from 3 series of consecutive cases. Panic attacks were found to be only quantitatively distinct from non-panic anxiety. Truly spontaneous attacks, not preceded by anxiety-provoking cognitions, were uncommon. No unique association with agoraphobia was seen, other anxiety states and depression being common. Social phobia and generalized anxiety often preceded the development of panic disorder, as did some cases of agoraphobia. Depression was usually non-specific and secondary when only DSM-III MDE criteria were used. Significant neurotic traits were found, particularly anxiety, dependency and poor sexual adjustment. Panic disorder has multiple causal factors only one of which is a genetic tendency for panic attacks. While important therapeutically, panic attacks should not be given the primary place in diagnosis.
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PMID:The phenomenological study of 90 patients with panic disorder, Part II. 263 56

This article examines the literature on marital therapy and spouse involvement as treatments for major psychopathology. The focus is on three disorders that have attracted a sufficient number of empirical findings: depression, agoraphobia, and alcoholism. For each of these disorders, we first examine the relation between marital dynamics and the disorder and next discuss empirical efforts to evaluate the impact of marital therapy or spouse involvement on the disorder. In addition, we summarize trends and suggest methodological refinements for future research.
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PMID:Marital therapy and spouse involvement in the treatment of depression, agoraphobia, and alcoholism. 264 2

A review of the clinical literature to date has shown that the nature of the relationship between phobic disorders and anxiety states is still unclear. As a wide range of symptoms are shared by patients with all DSM-III anxiety disorder diagnoses, at this stage there is still a need to investigate the latent dimensions which distinguish the anxiety disorder subtypes. In the present study 176 patients with the DSM-III diagnoses of agoraphobia with panic attacks, social phobia, panic disorder and generalized anxiety disorder completed the Fear Survey Schedule, Fear Questionnaire, Hostility and Direction of Hostility Questionnaire, Maudsley Personality Inventory, and the Hamilton Anxiety and Depression Scales. Group membership was significantly predicted by a discriminant analysis which yielded a Fear Questionnaire agoraphobia function and a social phobia function. The results from discriminant analysis suggests that agoraphobia and anxiety states may be closely related. Classification errors were also determined, providing further evidence with which to refute the claim that agoraphobia has "all or none" characteristics.
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PMID:Phobic disorders and anxiety states: how do they differ? 264 65

Fifty-five patients completed a 5-week double-blind study comparing alprazolam, propranolol, and placebo in the treatment of panic disorder and agoraphobia with panic attacks. There was no concomitant behavioral treatment. Patient and therapist rating scales included Sheehan's Panic and Anxiety Attack Scales, the Marks-Sheehan Phobia Scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale, the Hamilton Depression Scale, and the Side Effects Checklist. The results generally support the efficacy of alprazolam, but not propranolol, in the treatment of panic disorder and agoraphobia with panic attacks. The significance of the results are discussed, as well as a number of the unique aspects of our procedures and patient population.
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PMID:Alprazolam, propranolol, and placebo in the treatment of panic disorder and agoraphobia with panic attacks. 265 90

Patients with alcohol dependence commonly experience symptoms of anxiety, depression, and insomnia. It is essential that clinicians recognize and treat anxiety disorders in alcoholic patients. Panic attacks with and without agoraphobia are especially prevalent among alcoholics and their families. Treatments of choice for panic disorder are the monoamine oxidase inhibitors, as well as tricyclic antidepressants and the benzodiazepine alprazolam. Benzodiazepines seem to be effective in controlling two pathophysiologic characteristics of alcohol withdrawal--noradrenergic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical overactivity. They also can be used to prevent and treat withdrawal seizures and delirium tremens. They are not indicated for the treatment of alcohol dependence per se.
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PMID:Anxiety and alcoholism. 268 Nov 71

Urinary free cortisol (UFC) excretion in 31 patients with major depression is directly compared to UFC levels in 65 patients with panic disorder and 36 controls. Patients with depression demonstrated significantly higher UFC excretion [43 +/- 37 micrograms/g creatinine (cr)] than patients with panic disorder (29 +/- 13 micrograms/g-cr) or controls (22 +/- 10 micrograms/g-cr) (F = 8.5, df = 129, p less than 0.001). Panic patients with a secondary depression (35 +/- 17 micrograms/g-cr) or those with agoraphobia (34 +/- 14 micrograms/g-cr) had UFC levels that were in-between patients with primary major depression and panic patients without these complications (25 +/- 11 micrograms/g-cr). These findings support the hypothesis that patients with major depression, whether primary or secondary, and those with agoraphobia excrete more UFC than patients with uncomplicated panic disorder. This occurs despite the fact that panic disorder might also be expected to raise the stress-responsive hormone cortisol.
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PMID:Direct comparison of urinary free cortisol excretion in patients with depression and panic disorder. 272 2

The comorbidity of disorders and chronology of first symptoms of depression, agoraphobia, and panic disorder were investigated. The Diagnostic Interview Schedule was administered to 3258 household residents. Strong associations were shown among all three disorders. However, the comorbidity of agoraphobia and panic disorder seemed to be accounted for by the relationship of both disorders with depression. The mean age at appearance of first symptoms was earlier for agoraphobia (low teens) than for depression or panic disorder (both about age 20). The results do not support the view that panic disorder is an integral component of agoraphobia, but rather that it is more closely associated with depression. The fact that agoraphobia precedes depression casts doubt on the thesis that depression is primary to anxiety disorders. Interpretation should, however, be viewed with caution because of the retrospective nature of the diagnostic instrument.
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PMID:Relationship and chronology of depression, agoraphobia, and panic disorder in the general population. 276 May 96

The present study examined several dimensions of panic cognitions to test whether panic appraisals predict phobicity among panic sufferers. Thirty-five patients meeting DSM-III-R criteria for panic disorder with minimal or no phobic avoidance were compared to 40 patients meeting DSM-III-R criteria for panic disorder with agoraphobia (severe). The two groups looked strikingly similar on measures of panic symptoms, panic frequency and panic severity. As expected, patients diagnosed as having panic disorder with agoraphobia reported significantly more depression and phobic avoidance than patients with PD. Striking differences emerged on each of the following panic appraisal dimensions: (a) anticipated panic, (b) perceived consequences of panic, and (c) perceived self-efficacy in coping with panic. In each case, patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia reported significantly more dysfunctional panic appraisals than patients with panic disorder and no avoidance. Of those panic appraisal dimensions studied, anticipated panic emerged as the most potent correlate of agoraphobic avoidance. These findings support the hypothesis that cognitive appraisal factors may play an important role in the genesis or maintenance of phobic avoidance among panic patients.
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PMID:Role of cognitive appraisal in panic-related avoidance. 277 46


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