All Relations between Panic Disorder and anxiety sensitivity

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
S B Zeitlin, R J McNall. Alexithymia and anxiety sensitivity in panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The American journal of psychiatry. vol 150. issue 4. 1993-05-03. PMID:8031330. alexithymia and anxiety sensitivity in panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder. 1993-05-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
S B Zeitlin, R J McNall. Alexithymia and anxiety sensitivity in panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The American journal of psychiatry. vol 150. issue 4. 1993-05-03. PMID:8031330. the authors compared scores on the toronto alexithymia scale and the anxiety sensitivity index of 27 patients with panic disorder and 31 patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. 1993-05-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
R J McNall. Anxiety sensitivity distinguishes panic disorder from generalized anxiety disorder. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. vol 180. issue 11. 1992-12-02. PMID:1431831. anxiety sensitivity distinguishes panic disorder from generalized anxiety disorder. 1992-12-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
F M Saviotti, S Grandi, G Savron, R Ermentini, G Bartolucci, S Conti, G A Fav. Characterological traits of recovered patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia. Journal of affective disorders. vol 23. issue 3. 1992-02-28. PMID:1774426. although these findings might have been influenced by residual anxiety symptoms in panic-free patients and could also apply to patients with other anxiety disorders, they suggest that harm avoidance and anxiety sensitivity may be risk factors for developing agoraphobia and panic disorder. 1992-02-28 2023-08-11 human
R J McNall. Psychological approaches to panic disorder: a review. Psychological bulletin. vol 108. issue 3. 1991-02-19. PMID:2270235. this review covers variants of the "fear-of-fear" construal of panic disorder (i.e., pavlovian interoceptive conditioning, catastrophic misinterpretation of bodily sensations, anxiety sensitivity), research on predictability (i.e., expectancies) and controllability, and research on information-processing biases believed to underlie the phenomenology of panic. 1991-02-19 2023-08-11 human
M H Pollack, M W Otto, J F Rosenbaum, G S Sachs, C O'Neil, R Asher, S Meltzer-Brod. Longitudinal course of panic disorder: findings from the Massachusetts General Hospital Naturalistic Study. The Journal of clinical psychiatry. vol 51 Suppl A. 1991-01-29. PMID:2258371. findings from the massachusetts general hospital naturalistic study of the longitudinal course of panic disorder suggest that (1) a number of factors contribute to the severity and persistence of panic disorder, including phobic subtype, comorbid anxiety disorders, depression, personality disorders, and anxiety sensitivity; (2) chronicity is common; (3) for some, an anxiety diathesis is manifested early in childhood and sets the tone for later chronicity and comorbidity; (4) maladaptive personality characteristics may be manifestations of an underlying anxiety disorder; (5) patients with continued symptomatology despite improvement may benefit from the flexible integration of pharmacologic and cognitive-behavioral treatment approaches; and (6) long-term treatment is indicated for many patients. 1991-01-29 2023-08-11 Not clear