All Relations between aversion and Anxiety Disorders

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
E J Garlan. Rages and refusals. Managing the many faces of adolescent anxiety. Canadian family physician Medecin de famille canadien. vol 47. 2001-08-09. PMID:11398717. to provide family physicians with a practical approach to recognition, assessment, and treatment of adolescent anxiety disorders complicated by avoidance or oppositional behaviour. 2001-08-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
F Godemann, B Ahrens, S Behrens, R Berthold, C Gandor, F Lampe, M Linde. Classic conditioning and dysfunctional cognitions in patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia treated with an implantable cardioverter/defibrillator. Psychosomatic medicine. vol 63. issue 2. 2001-07-26. PMID:11292270. if the theory of anxiety development by aversive classic conditioning processes is valid, these repeated shocks should lead to an increased risk of anxiety disorders. 2001-07-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
M H Pollac. Comorbidity, neurobiology, and pharmacotherapy of social anxiety disorder. The Journal of clinical psychiatry. vol 62 Suppl 12. 2001-07-19. PMID:11430615. persons who have social anxiety disorder either endure or avoid social situations altogether because the fear of embarrassment causes such intense anxiety; such avoidance may ultimately interfere with occupational and/or social functioning and lead to significant disability. 2001-07-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
J C Ballenge. Recognizing the patient with social anxiety disorder. International clinical psychopharmacology. vol 15 Suppl 1. 2001-01-11. PMID:10994676. social anxiety disorder is also easily distinguished from other anxiety disorders by the situations in which patients experience fear and avoidance; for the patient with social anxiety disorder, these situations always involve social interaction or scrutiny by other people. 2001-01-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
M A Zamorski, R K War. Social anxiety disorder: common, disabling, and treatable. The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice. vol 13. issue 4. 2000-12-22. PMID:10933289. social anxiety disorder (also known as social phobia) is characterized by extreme fear, avoidance, or both of one or more social or performance situations, such as making a presentation, meeting new people, or eating in front of others. 2000-12-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
C W Lejuez, M J Zvolensky, G H Eifer. Using a single-subject design to assess the development of anxiety in humans. Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry. vol 30. issue 1. 1999-07-07. PMID:10365861. because research suggests that anxiety disorders develop and change with repeated exposure to aversive events, these studies may fail to mimic the developmental course of anxiety in the natural environment. 1999-07-07 2023-08-12 human
F G Graeff, C F Netto, H Zangross. The elevated T-maze as an experimental model of anxiety. Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews. vol 23. issue 2. 1999-03-29. PMID:9884116. these behavioral and pharmacological results support the view that inhibitory avoidance in the elevated t-maze may be related to generalized anxiety disorder, while one-way escape may be associated with panic disorder. 1999-03-29 2023-08-12 rat
C Meyer, R Stei. [Post-traumatic stress disorder after traffic accidents]. Der Unfallchirurg. vol 101. issue 12. 1999-03-25. PMID:10025237. it is an anxiety disorder characterized by intrusive reliving of the accident, avoidance of reminders of the trauma and increased arousal. 1999-03-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
C Grillon, L Dierker, K R Merikanga. Fear-potentiated startle in adolescent offspring of parents with anxiety disorders. Biological psychiatry. vol 44. issue 10. 1999-02-05. PMID:9821563. the startle reflex and its potentiation by aversive states was used as a possible vulnerability marker for anxiety disorders in adolescent offspring of parents with this condition. 1999-02-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
P C Friman, S C Hayes, K G Wilso. Why behavior analysts should study emotion: the example of anxiety. Journal of applied behavior analysis. vol 31. issue 1. 1998-04-28. PMID:9532758. its primary points are (a) that languageable humans have an extraordinary capacity to derive relations between events and that it is a simple matter to show that neutral stimuli can acquire discriminative functions indirectly with no direct training; (b) that private events can readily acquire discriminative functions; (c) that anxiety disorders seem to occur with little apparent direct learning or that the amount of direct learning is extraordinarily out of proportion with the amount of responding; and (d) that the primary function of anxious behavior is experiential avoidance. 1998-04-28 2023-08-12 human
P C Friman, S C Hayes, K G Wilso. Why behavior analysts should study emotion: the example of anxiety. Journal of applied behavior analysis. vol 31. issue 1. 1998-04-28. PMID:9532758. we conclude that the most interesting aspects of anxiety disorders may occur as a function of derived rather than direct relations between public events and overt and private responses with avoidance functions. 1998-04-28 2023-08-12 human
M M Anton. Assessment and treatment of social phobia. Canadian journal of psychiatry. Revue canadienne de psychiatrie. vol 42. issue 8. 1997-12-24. PMID:9356770. social phobia is an anxiety disorder characterized by heightened fear and avoidance of one or more social or performance situations, including public speaking, meeting new people, eating or writing in front of others, and attending social gatherings. 1997-12-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
M W Otto, M H Pollack, J F Rosenbaum, G S Sachs, R H Ashe. Childhood history of anxiety in adults with panic disorder: association with anxiety sensitivity and comorbidity. Harvard review of psychiatry. vol 1. issue 5. 1997-12-23. PMID:9384860. these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that having an anxiety disorder during childhood is linked with patterns of anxiety and phobic avoidance in adulthood, including the level of anxiety sensitivity in patients with panic disorder. 1997-12-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
G Scheibe, M Albu. Predictors and outcome in panic disorder: a 2-year prospective follow-up study. Psychopathology. vol 30. issue 3. 1997-07-31. PMID:9186984. comorbid generalized anxiety disorder, duration of illness, and phobic avoidance behavior were found to be the best predictors of outcome. 1997-07-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
E G Hantouche, M Bourgeois, M Bouhassira, S Lancreno. [Clinical aspects of obsessive-compulsive syndromes: results of phase 2 of a large French survey]. L'Encephale. vol 22. issue 4. 1997-02-24. PMID:9035981. the results of the french survey phase 2 had confirmed a variety of classical and current literature data, especially: the icd 10 proposal for diagnostic sub-typology according to symptomatic predominance (obsessions, compulsions or both); the symptomatic clustering of obsessions and compulsions into three major categories, suggested by a recent study from the boston university; the high rate of comorbidity with anxiety and depressive disorders and with disorders related to the large ocd spectrum (somatoform disorders, eating disorders, impulse-control disorders, compulsive buying...); the impact of clinical parameters (as slowness, avoidance, lack of insight) on clinical global ocd and ocs severity; the high rate of intrafamilial psychiatric morbidity (ocd, depression, anxiety disorders). 1997-02-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
M R Liebowit. Pharmacotherapy of social phobia. The Journal of clinical psychiatry. vol 54 Suppl. 1994-02-09. PMID:8276748. the liebowitz social anxiety scale (lsas) was developed to help clinicians evaluate data by examining fear and avoidance together in order to provide a fuller understanding of anxiety disorders. 1994-02-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Vollrath, J Angs. Coping and illness behavior among young adults with panic. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. vol 181. issue 5. 1993-06-30. PMID:8501446. subjects with panic differed significantly from subjects with other anxiety disorders and controls in their coping strategies by seeking social support, using cognitive avoidance, and using rumination more frequently. 1993-06-30 2023-08-12 human
P Di Nardo, K Moras, D H Barlow, R M Rapee, T A Brow. Reliability of DSM-III-R anxiety disorder categories. Using the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule-Revised (ADIS-R). Archives of general psychiatry. vol 50. issue 4. 1993-05-05. PMID:8466385. remaining diagnostic difficulties, particularly in identifying levels of agoraphobic avoidance and in reliably diagnosing generalized anxiety disorder, are discussed in the context of changes in diagnostic criteria that are under consideration for dsm-iv. 1993-05-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Camenietzk. A psychotherapist engages in behaviour therapy. Canadian journal of psychiatry. Revue canadienne de psychiatrie. vol 36. issue 7. 1991-12-26. PMID:1682030. the article reviews clinical findings that led an experienced psychotherapist to favour behaviour therapy over psychotherapy for patients who have anxiety disorders involving avoidance of specific situations or avoidance of specific activities. 1991-12-26 2023-08-11 Not clear
I Jalenques, A J Couder. [Anxiety disorders in children: do any risk factors exist?]. Annales de pediatrie. vol 37. issue 8. 1991-02-07. PMID:2264694. familial risk factors have a very strong effect: children of parents with current or past anxiety disorders with or without mood disorders are at increased risk for anxiety disorders; this risk varies according to the type of disorder in the parents (for instance, the respective roles of panic attacks and avoidance behaviors remain unclear). 1991-02-07 2023-08-11 Not clear