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The present paper is part on an extensive follow-up study aimed at the investigation of the effects of in-patient psychotherapy and at the durability of those effects. Using a psychoanalytic oriented personality-inventory (PSKB, Rudolf 1981) 85 phobic patients were examined at the beginning, at the end, and one year after a 6-8 week in-patient psychotherapy. Our results confirmed some of the generally described personality-characteristics in patients with phobia: the phobic symptoms are often accompanied by physical symptoms (sensation of dizziness, weakness sensation, palpitation, sleep disturbance, heavy sweating and breathlessness) and psychic symptoms (anxiousness, depression, restlessness, reduced self-awareness, pedantry, inhibition of aggressive impulses) which could be influenced by psychotherapy. Furthermore we depicted results which have not yet been published in literature.
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PMID:[Personality markers of phobic patients and their change in psychotherapy. Descriptive results of a catamnestic project of the effectiveness of 6-9 week inpatient treatment]. 177 Dec 26

One hundred ten litigants who were suing for emotional damages were assessed by the author for medical-legal reasons. Most of the plaintiffs were involved in motor vehicle accidents and suffered from "whiplash" injuries. Semi-structured interviews were used to reach criteria based on DSM-III-R diagnoses. Requests for consultation, on average, came 25 months after the patient's accident. Approximately 70 percent of patients had evidence for continuing physical injuries to account for the physical and emotional symptoms. The most common DSM-III-R diagnoses were psychiatric condition affecting physical illness (N = 56), major depression (N = 27), and somatoform disorder (N = 12). Alternative diagnoses relating the effect of the accident on the patient's life included: emotional reaction to physical condition (N = 29), difficulty coping with developmental tasks (N = 20), severe depression (N = 20), aggravation of normal premorbid personality (N = 18), aggravation of abnormal premorbid personality (N = 14), phobia (N = 7), no permanent effect (N = 12), and independent illness (N = 2). Severe emotional problems and disability are common among litigants. The causes of their suffering are more complex and less poorly understood than is assumed from the pejorative labels that are sometimes applied. Lawyers and the courts need the help of psychiatrists to understand this suffering. Empirical data such as these may lead to better classification systems and improve our understanding and treatment of these patients.
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PMID:The demographic and psychiatric characteristics of 110 personal injury litigants. 177 86

Georges Gilles de la Tourette first drew attention to the psychopathology of the Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome (GTS) in 1889 when he commented on the anxieties and phobias of his patients. In this paper he acknowledged the contribution of Guinon, who in 1886 had noted that "tiquers" nearly always had associated psychiatric disorders characterised by multiple phobias, arithmomania and agoraphobia. Since that time many types of psychopathology have been documented in association with GTS, including depression, anxiety, phobic disorder, hostility and aggression. However, the exact association between these disorders and GTS remains unclear. What is becoming increasingly evident is that there is a clear and strong association between obsessional thoughts and behaviours and GTS, and this is seen both in patients with GTS and in their family members. There have now been at least twenty investigations which have reported on this association, which is evident in clinic patients, epidemiological studies and family/pedigree populations. There have also been convincing arguments for the association being genetic.
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PMID:The Gilles de la Tourette syndrome and obsessional disorder. 180 36

Children with conduct disorder have long been known to be at high risk for developing externalizing disorders, alcohol and drug abuse, and antisocial personality. Relationships of conduct disorder to other adult psychiatric disorders, on the other hand, have not been definitively shown. Taking advantage of the large community sample (N = 19,482) interviewed in the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program, the authors examined the effects of childhood conduct problems on ten DSM-III psychiatric disorders: somatization, phobia, panic, obsessive-compulsive, depression, mania, alcohol use disorder, drug use disorder, schizophrenia and antisocial personality. Each of the ten adult disorders showed an increase in prevalence with an increasing number of conduct problems, although effects were stronger for externalizing disorders. The predictive power of conduct problems was similar for males and females. The effect of conduct problems on nonexternalizing disorders was found to be largely mediated through externalizing disorders, particularly for men but direct effects also occurred for both sexes. These findings raise questions about the conventional view of psychiatric disorders as divisible into externalizing and internalizing disorders. They also suggest that the increasing rates of conduct problems in younger cohorts may be responsible in part for the rising rates of other disorders. Thus, prevention of and early intervention with conduct disorder may hold promise for reducing rates of a broad range of disorders.
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PMID:Adult disorders predicted by childhood conduct problems: results from the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area project. 185 46

In this paper the authors report the results of a cross-over treatment of 79 case of neurosis with vacuum drugs and L-tryptophan. The therapeutic effects were evaluated respectively with four-degree scale and the rating scales of SCL-90. Sleep vs. Sleep disturbance self-checklist. Side effects were evaluated with TESS. The data show that treatment of L-tryptophan 3.0g/day for six weeks. Rate of marked improvement is 58.2%, effective rate is 91.1%. It is concluded that the effects of hypnosis and sedation are mild side effects only. Using L-tryptophan the therapeutic effects which concern somatization depression anxiety, phobia, compulsion, are analysed and discussed.
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PMID:[A self body double blind clinical study of L-tryptophan and placebo in treated neurosis]. 186 Mar 85

Measurements of cardiac function and Symptom Checklist-90R (SCL-90R) data were retrospectively analyzed in two independent groups of cardiac transplant candidates in an effort to identify organic correlates of depressive syndromes. In the first study, no significant inverse correlations were found between depression measures and cardiac index as had been predicted. However, elevated right atrial pressure was associated with increased scores of the SCL-90R depression subscale (DEP) and global symptom index (GSI). A significant positive correlation was also found between the phobia subscale and cardiac index. In a second sample, again, cardiac index did not correlate inversely with DEP or GSI. The phobia-cardiac index correlation was replicated but the right atrial pressure correlations were not. Combining both groups, there were significant correlations between six SCL-90R subscales (including DEP and GSI) and cardiac index. All were positive correlations, refuting the initial hypothesis and suggesting patients with the best cardiac function reported the worst psychological distress and that patients with the worst cardiac function reported the least psychological distress. Possible explanations for these findings are discussed.
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PMID:Correlations of cardiac function and SCL-90R in heart transplantation candidates. 189 52

The NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule (n = 43), and the Hopkins Symptom Checklist and Weissman Social Adjustment Scale (n = 35) was administered to assess the prevalence of psychiatric disorders and psychosocial maladjustment present in women seeking treatment in a multidisciplinary Premenstrual Syndrome Clinic. We found a 67 percent lifetime prevalence of DIS/DSM-III psychiatric disorders: 50 percent Major Affective Disorder (primarily Depression), 53 percent Anxiety Disorder (primarily Phobias or Generalized Anxiety Disorder), and 40 percent Psychosexual Dysfunction (notably Inhibited Sexual Desire or Excitement). Our group had significantly greater Major Depression, Dysthymia, and any one psychiatric disorder compared with female general population samples. Two-thirds of women with premenstrual symptoms had true Premenstrual Syndrome. In our sample, social maladjustment as well as psychiatric symptomatology was significantly greater than in normals and closer to that in psychiatric out-patient norms, and was independent of cycle phase. Presence or absence of PMS, social maladjustment and sexual dysfunction was each not significantly different in women with or without psychiatric disorder.
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PMID:Sexual dysfunction, social maladjustment, and psychiatric disorders in women seeking treatment in a premenstrual syndrome clinic. 189 58

This study examined the long-term effectiveness of specific exposure in vivo (individual IE or group GE) and of office-based social skills training (group SST) in two groups of patients with social inhibition (primary social skills deficits or primary social phobia). Seventy-eight outpatients were divided into these two subgroups according to clinical assessment. Twenty-seven patients received SST which consisted of 25 twice a week 90-min group sessions: 32 patients received GE and 17 IE. Exposure in vivo consisted of 4 weekly (8-hr in the group condition included 2 hr discussion; 3 hr in the individual condition included 1 hr discussion) sessions. Self-rating-assessments were carried out at pre- and post-treatment, at 3 months- and 2.5 yr follow-up. The general results indicate that all three treatment modes led to clinically and statistically-significant improvements in the main problem area (social anxiety, skills deficits), in other neurotic complaints (depression, obsessions, psychosomatic complaints) and in attribution-style. Patients with the diagnosis of primary phobia seemed to get the same profit from either treatment and showed slightly better gains (in all treatment modalities) than patients with skills deficits at long-term follow-up. Within the subgroup with skills deficits there was a tendency for superior outcome of group exposure. These results and recommendations for future research are discussed.
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PMID:Exposure in vivo vs social skills training for social phobia: long-term outcome and differential effects. 197 51

The aim of this study was to explore the association between psychosocial variables and somatic complaints in terms of the biopsychosocial model. The analysis showed that both socioeconomic and psychological variables play a prominent role in the subjective complaints of coronary symptoms as follows: (1) Functional class: A low occupational index was found to be a predictor of much disability. Subjects with higher self-ratings of psychiatric symptoms (i.e. phobia, depression, interpersonal hypersensitivity), lower personal well-being (i.e. esteem, competence), and major social maladaptation had significantly more disability. (2) Chest pain: Patients with a higher morbidity of chest pain were more likely to be female, have less education, have more social maladjustment, and have less social support. Higher scores of psychiatric symptoms (i.e. anxiety, depression, hostility) and a perception of threatening by others were highly correlated with the severity of chest discomfort. Physicians should be aware of the ways in which psychosocial and biomedical variables may interact at many levels, especially for the patients with unexplained physical symptoms or social dysfunction.
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PMID:[Psychosocial aspect of somatic complaints in patients after myocardial infarction]. 197 6

Patients who meet DSM-III-R criteria for a diagnosis of panic disorder often show a complex mixture of psychopathological symptoms, including panic attacks (spontaneous and situational), anxiety (anticipatory and generalized), phobias (fear and avoidance), depression/dysphoria, and social and occupational disability. Various theories about the pathogenesis of these symptoms have been advanced that focus on a given symptom (e.g., panic, phobia) being primary in these disorders, with concurrent symptoms seen as epiphenomena or as secondary and reactive to a core symptom. This study, conducted on a large sample of panic disorder patients (N = 1,168), examines the temporal sequential pattern of symptom improvement in these patients, and explores how these relationships relate to various pathogenic theories. Our multiple analyses, when considered together, tend not to support any pathogenic theory that views a given symptom as being central to the overall disorder; our findings have obvious implications for theoreticians and clinicians interested in the study and treatment of panic and anxiety disorders.
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PMID:The sequence of improvement of the symptoms encountered in patients with panic disorder. 177 83


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