Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Ian D. Shulman"'
Publikováno v:
Comprehensive Psychiatry, Vol 36, Iss 3, Pp 195-198 (1995)
Two recent studies have found that small samples of panic disorder patients appear to have elevated levels of alexithymia and raised the possibility that panic patients may constrict emotional experience. An alternate hypothesis is that there is conc
Publikováno v:
Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 8:181-187
We examined 55 survivors of road vehicle accidents (RVA) with minimal injury and chronic pain physically, by structured clinical interview, by panic, phobia, anxiety sensitivity, and pain scales. Twenty-one (38.2%) of the 55 RVA survivors met DSM-III
Publikováno v:
Behaviour Research and Therapy. 31:413-416
Previous studies have found some significant, but weak, gender differences in panic and agoraphobia with females generally being more symptomatic. The present study sought to expand this line of research by examining alcohol use and self-medication i
Publikováno v:
Behaviour Research and Therapy. 30:563-568
Many anxiety disorder patients who present for behaviour therapy are already taking anxiolytic medications. The present study added a new subscale to the Mobility Inventory labelled 'Without Medication' to assess possible reliance on medication for c
Publikováno v:
Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 22:255-259
Studies indicate that panic disorder is often associated with high levels of somatic preoccupation, but the nature of these somatic complaints have not been investigated in detail. One hundred and forty-one consecutive panic disorder patients were ad
Publikováno v:
Journal of psychosomatic research. 38(6)
The prevalence of alexithymia in fifty-five motor vehicle accident survivors who had chronic pain complaints and met DSM-III-R criteria for somatoform pain disorder was 53%. Alexithymic and non-alexithymic patients did not differ on self-reports of c
Publikováno v:
Behaviour research and therapy. 32(1)
This study examined the phenomenology of the initial panic attack in 85 panic disorder patients with or without agoraphobia. Patients were divided into minimal and extensive avoiders and three domains were assessed: precipitating factors, location of