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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Impact of psychological trauma on the development of psychotic symptoms: relationship with psychosis proneness

Spauwen, Janneke, Krabbendam, Lydia, Lieb, Roselind, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, van Os, Jim 25 March 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Background. The reported link between psychological trauma and onset of psychosis remains controversial. Aims. To examine associations between self-reported psychological trauma and psychotic symptoms as a function of prior evidence of vulnerability to psychosis (psychosis proneness). Method. At baseline, 2524 adolescents aged 14-24 years provided self-reports on psychological trauma and psychosis proneness, and at follow-up (on average 42 months later) participants were interviewed for presence of psychotic symptoms. Results. Self-reported trauma was associated with psychotic symptoms, in particular at more severe levels (adjusted OR1.89,95% CI1.16-3.08) and following trauma associated with intense fear, helplessness or horror. The risk difference between those with and without self-reported trauma at baseline was 7% in the group with baseline psychosis proneness, but only 1.8% in those without (adjusted test for difference between these two effect sizes: χ2=4.6, P=0.032). Conclusions. Exposure to psychological trauma may increase the risk of psychotic symptoms in people vulnerable to psychosis.
22

Der Langzeitverlauf unbehandelter Angststörungen: Wie häufig sind Spontanremissionen?

Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 03 December 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Der Langzeitverlauf und die Häufigkeit sogenannter spontaner Remissionen wurde anhand von 77 Fallen mit einer Lifetime-Diagnose einer Angststörung untersucht. Die 77 Angstfälle wurden als Teil der Münchner Follow-up-Studie im Rahmen einer allgemeinen Bevölkerungsuntersuchung im Jahre 1974 identifiziert und wurden über einen Zeitraum von sieben Jahren (bis 1981) weiter untersucht. Die Diagnosen wurden einerseits durch ein standardisiertes diagnostisches Instrument (den DIS), andererseits über eine klinisch-psychiatrische Nachuntersuchung (1981) abgesichert. In Ergänzung hierzu wurde der Verlauf der psychopathologischen Symptome sowie die psychologische und psychosoziale Integration der Versuchspersonen beurteilt. Ergebnisse: Die Lebenszeit-Prävalenz, irgendeine Anststörung zu entwickeln, betrug 13,9%. Einfache und soziale Phobien wiesen eine Prävalenz von 8,0%, Agoraphobie von 5,7%, Zwangsstörungen von 2,0% und Panikstörungen von 2,4% auf. Die Inzidenz, d.h. das Auftreten neuer Fälle im Zeitraum zwischen der Erst- und Zweituntersuchung war niedrig, mit Ausnahme für Panikstörungen (1,2%, bei einer Gesamtprävalenz von 2,4%) und Agoraphobie (1,3% bei einer Gesamtprävalenz von 5,7%). Die Komorbidität war sowohl innerhalb der Angststörungen wie auch bezüglich anderer psychischer Störungen erhöht. 62% hatten mehr als eine Angstdiagnose, Major Depression und Abhängigkeit von Alkohol oder Medikamenten waren die häufigsten komorbiden Störungen, die in der überwiegenden Mehrzahl deutlich nach dem Beginn der Angststörung auftraten. Spontanremissionen wurden auf drei unterschiedlichen Ebenen definiert, von denen ein Kombinationsmaβ als Hauptergebnis interpretiert wurde. Danach war die symptomatische Remission in alien Angstgruppen niedrig, während die psychosoziale Remissionsrate ein günstigeres Bild mit Remissionsraten zwischen 28,6% für Panikstörung und 53,1% für einfache und soziale Phobien ergab. Das kombinierte spontane Remissionsmaβ ergab für keine der Zwangsstörungen, nur 14,3% der Panikstörungen, 19,2% der Agoraphobien und 18,8% der einfachen und sozialen Phobie eine voile Remission. Die Ergebnisse unterstreichen, daβ Angststörungen zumeist in der Kindheit oder frühen Adoleszenz beginnen und dazu neigen, chronisch über den Groβteil des Lebens zu persistieren und nur selten zu remittieren.
23

Broadening the definition of generalized anxiety disorder: Effects on prevalence and associations with other disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication

Ruscio, Ayelet Meron, Chiu, Wai Tat, Roy-Byrne, Peter, Stang, Paul E., Stein, Dan J., Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Kessler, Ronald C. 11 April 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Concerns have been raised that the DSM-IV requirements of 6-month duration, excessive worry, and three associated symptoms exclude a substantial number of people with clinically significant anxiety from a diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). We examined the implications of relaxing these three criteria for the estimated prevalence and predictive validity of GAD using nationally representative data from the US National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Relaxing all three criteria more than doubles the estimated prevalence of GAD. Broadly defined GAD significantly predicts the subsequent first onset of a wide range of temporally secondary disorders. The odds of secondary disorders are somewhat smaller for broadly defined than DSM-IV GAD, though few of these differences are statistically significant. Results suggest that subthreshold manifestations of GAD are significantly related to elevated risk of subsequent psychopathology. Further research is needed to determine whether broadening the current diagnostic criteria results in a more valid characterization of GAD.
24

Association between generalized anxiety levels and pain in a community sample: Evidence for diagnostic specificity

Beesdo, Katja, Hoyer, Jürgen, Jacobi, Frank, Low, Nancy C.P., Höfler, Michael, Wittchen , Hans-Ulrich 13 April 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Background: It is unclear whether generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) has a specific relationship to pain syndromes, going beyond the established association of pain with anxiety syndromes in general. Methods: Mental disorders were assessed in a community sample (N = 4181; 18–65 years) using the DSM-IV/M-CIDI. Several threshold definitions were used to define GAD and medically unexplained pain. Results: The association between pain and GAD (odds ratio, OR = 5.8 pain symptoms; OR = 16.0 pain disorder) is stronger than the association between pain and other anxiety disorders (OR = 2.4 pain symptoms; OR = 4.0 pain disorder). This association extends to subthreshold level definitions of GAD with some indication for a non-linear dose–response relationship. The GAD-pain link cannot sufficiently be explained by demographic factors, comorbid mental or physical disorders. Conclusions: The association of pain and generalized anxiety is not artifactual. Compared to other anxiety syndromes, it appears to be stronger and more specific suggesting the need to explore clinical and public health implications.
25

Do parental psychopathology and unfavorable family environment predict the persistence of social phobia?

Knappe, Susanne, Beesdo, Katja, Fehm, Lydia, Höfler, Michael, Lieb, Roselind, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 13 April 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Parental psychopathology and unfavorable family environment are established risk factors for onset of offspring social phobia (SP), but their associations with the further course, e.g., persistence of the disorder, remain understudied. A community cohort of 1395 adolescents and their parents was followed-up over almost 10 years using the DIA-X/M-CIDI. Parental diagnostic interviews were supplemented by family history data. Parental rearing was retrospectively assessed by the Questionnaire of Recalled Parental Rearing Behavior in offspring, and family functioning by the Family Assessment Device in parents. Persistence measures (proportion of years affected since onset) were derived from diagnostic interviews, using age of onset, age of recency, and course information. Lack of emotional warmth and dysfunctional family functioning characteristics were associated with higher SP persistence, particularly in interaction with parental psychopathology. Predictors for SP persistence differ from those predicting SP onset. Unfavorable family environment alone and in interaction with parental disorders predict higher SP persistence.
26

Characterizing the association between parenting and adolescent social phobia

Knappe, Susanne, Beesdo-Baum, Katja, Fehm, Lydia, Lieb, Roselind, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 13 August 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Objectives: For characterizing the association between parenting and offspring social phobia (SP), contrasting maternal vs. paternal contributions, putative predictors of unfavorable parenting behaviors and its specificity for SP are warranted to delineate targeted prevention and intervention strategies. Methods: A population-based sample of 1053 adolescents was followed-up using the M-CIDI. Parenting was assessed via questionnaire in offspring passing the high risk period for SP-onset. Natal complications and childhood serious health problems as assessed by maternal reports were hypothesized to relate to unfavorable parenting. Results: The pattern of maternal overprotection, paternal rejection and lower emotional warmth was associated with SP, but not with other offspring anxiety disorders. Natal complications were related to overprotection and lower emotional warmth; trend-level associations emerged for serious health problems and unfavorable parenting. Conclusions: Paternal behavior appears particularly relevant for SP. The pattern of maternal overprotection, paternal rejection and lower emotional warmth was observed in SP only, suggesting that its detailed assessment provides a promising opportunity for targeted prevention and intervention in SP.
27

The diagnostic threshold of generalized anxiety disorder in the community: A developmental perspective

Beesdo-Baum, Katja, Winkel, Susanne, Pine, Daniel S., Hoyer, Jürgen, Höfler, Michael, Lieb, Roselind, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 13 August 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Discussion surrounds the question as to whether criteria for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) should change, particularly in youth. This study examines the effects of possible criteria changes on GAD prevalence and clinical correlates. DSM-IV GAD was assessed using the M-CIDI in a community sample of adolescents and young adults. Diagnostic thresholds were modified in two age spans (9–20 and 21–34 years) using a person-by-year data file (N = 38,534 cases). Relaxing the duration or excessiveness criteria led to the most pronounced changes in GAD prevalence, while relaxing frequency, uncontrollability, or associated-symptom criteria had smaller effects. A lower duration requirement increased rates more in older than younger age spans. Opposite effects occurred for changes in associated-symptoms or clinical-significance criteria. Broader GAD definitions identified cases in both age spans that appeared mostly milder than DSM-IV cases but that still differed from non-GAD cases in various clinical factors and validators. Developmental aspects require stronger consideration in future diagnostic systems.
28

Dynamics of Defensive Reactivity in Patients with Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia: Implications for the Etiology of Panic Disorder

Richter, Jan, Hamm, Alfons O., Pané-Farré, Christiane A., Gerlach, Alexander L., Gloster, Andrew T., Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Lang, Thomas, Alpers, Georg W., Helbig-Lang, Sylvia, Deckert, Jürgen, Fydrich, Thomas, Fehm, Lydia, Ströhle, Andreas, Kircher, Tilo, Arolt, Volker 15 August 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Background: The learning perspective of panic disorder distinguishes between acute panic and anxious apprehension as distinct emotional states. Following animal models, these clinical entities reflect different stages of defensive reactivity depending upon the imminence of interoceptive or exteroceptive threat cues. The current study tested this model by investigating the dynamics of defensive reactivity in a large group of patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia (PD/AG). Methods: Three hundred forty-five PD/AG patients participated in a standardized behavioral avoidance test (being entrapped in a small, dark chamber for 10 minutes). Defense reactivity was assessed measuring avoidance and escape behavior, self-reports of anxiety and panic symptoms, autonomic arousal (heart rate and skin conductance), and potentiation of the startle reflex before and during exposure of the behavioral avoidance test. Results: Panic disorder and agoraphobia patients differed substantially in their defensive reactivity. While 31.6% of the patients showed strong anxious apprehension during this task (as indexed by increased reports of anxiety, elevated physiological arousal, and startle potentiation), 20.9% of the patients escaped from the test chamber. Active escape was initiated at the peak of the autonomic surge accompanied by an inhibition of the startle response as predicted by the animal model. These physiological responses resembled the pattern observed during the 34 reported panic attacks. Conclusions: We found evidence that defensive reactivity in PD/AG patients is dynamically organized ranging from anxious apprehension to panic with increasing proximity of interoceptive threat. These data support the learning perspective of panic disorder.
29

Effekte therapeutenbegleiteter versus patientengeleiteter Exposition bei Panikstörung mit Agoraphobie

Lang, Thomas, Helbig-Lang, Sylvia, Gloster, Andrew T., Richter, Jan, Hamm, Alfons O., Fehm, Lydia, Fydrich, Thomas, Gerlach, Alexander L., Ströhle, Andreas, Alpers, Georg W., Gauggel, Siegried, Kircher, Tilo, Deckert, Jürgen, Höfler, Michael, Arolt, Volker, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 09 July 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Theoretischer Hintergrund: Die Rolle der Therapeutenbegleitung während Expositionsübungen bei Panikstörung mit Agoraphobie (P/A) ist bislang ungeklärt. Eine kürzlich durchgeführte klinische Studie (MAC-Studie) lieferte Hinweise auf ein günstigeres Behandlungsergebnis bei Therapeutenbegleitung. Fragestellung: Wie lassen sich Effekte therapeutenbegleiteter Exposition (T+) im Vergleich zu Exposition ohne Therapeutenbegleitung (T–) erklären? Methode: Daten von 301 Patienten, die eine expositionsbasierte KVT mit bzw. ohne Therapeutenbegleitung erhalten hatten, wurden analysiert. Untersucht wurden der Einfluss der initialen Störungsschwere, des Sicherheitsverhaltens sowie differenzielle Effekte der Bedingungen auf die Angst vor der Angst. Zusätzlich wurde überprüft, inwieweit die Übungshäufigkeit in den Behandlungsbedingungen variiert und einen Mediator des Behandlungserfolgs darstellt. Ergebnisse: Störungsschwere und Sicherheitsverhalten zeigten keine differenziellen Effekte zwischen den Bedingungen; die T+ Bedingung führte jedoch zu stärkeren Reduktionen der Angst vor der Angst im Angstsensitivitätsindex. Patienten der T+ Bedingung führten häufiger selbständig Expositionsübungen durch, während Patienten in T– im Durchschnitt länger übten. Die Übungshäufigkeit stellte dabei einen Mediator des Behandlungserfolgs dar. Schlussfolgerungen: Günstigere Effekte einer therapeutenbegleiteten Exposition gehen auf stärkere Reduktionen der Angst vor der Angst sowie auf eine höhere Übungshäufigkeit im Selbstmanagement zurück. / Theoretical background: There is a paucity of studies examining the role of therapist guidance during in-vivo exposure for panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/AG). A recent study (MAC-study) suggested superior effects of therapist-guided exposure compared to programmed practice. Objectives: Examining potential mechanisms of therapist-guided exposure. Methods: Data from 301 patients with PD/AG who received either CBT with therapist guidance during in-vivo exposure (T+), or CBT with programmed exposure practice (T–) were analysed in regard to effects of initial symptom severity, subtle avoidance behaviours, reductions in fear of fear, and frequency of exposure homework. Results: There were no interaction effects between symptom severity or subtle avoidance and outcome. T+ was associated with higher reductions in fear of fear as well as with higher frequency of exposure homework. Frequency of exposure homework mediated the effect of group on outcome. Conclusion: Advantages of therapist-guided exposure as well as frequency of self-exposure might be attributed to higher reductions in fear of fear.
30

Psychophysiological Effects of Respiratory Challenges before and after Breathing Training in Panic Disorder and Patients suffering from Episodic Anxiety Attacks

Wollburg, Eileen 13 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Panic Disorder (PD) has been associated with abnormalities in the respiratory system for a long time, and treatment programs aimed at reversing these abnormalities have been developed. Panicogenic effects of biological challenges have been shown to be altered after successful treatment. Furthermore, there is evidence that anxious non-PD patients show similar responses to these challenges and hence may benefit from some kind of breathing training (BT). To test these assumptions, we recruited 45 PD patients, 39 Episodic Anxiety (EA) patients who suffered from subclinical panic attacks, and 20 non-anxious controls (NAC). Patients were randomized to one of two versions of a 4-week therapy with BT, either lower or raise end-tidal pCO2, or a waiting list (WL). Before and after treatment, participants underwent in randomized order a Voluntary Hypoventilation (VHO) test and a Voluntary Hyperventilation (VHT) test in which they were asked to either lower or raise their pCO2 while psychophysiological measures were recorded. Each test consisted of 3 segments: 1 min baseline, 3 min paced breathing, and 8 min recovery. Before treatment, PD and EA patients were more anxious, distressed, tense, and worried than NAC, and felt more dizziness, chest pain, and nausea during the laboratory assessment. However, increases in psychological symptoms or physiological sensations from baseline to the paced breathing segments were not different between groups. The two tests produced similar changes except that anxiety and dizziness increased more during the VHT than VHO. We replicated baseline breathing abnormalities previously reported for PD patients, namely greater respiration rate, tidal volume instability, and number of sighs. However, analyses did not find that patients recovered slower to either challenge. After treatment, both therapies improved on the main outcome measure. Furthermore, BT affected baseline pCO2, resulting in lower levels in the hypocapnic groups and higher levels in the hypercapnic groups without affecting any other measures. We conclude that baseline respiratory abnormalities are specific to PD. However, data suggest that the manipulations might have been too weak to elicit other previously reported group differences. Breathing training was equally effective for the lower and raise BT. Hence, factors unrelated to modifying one’s pCO2 must have accounted for the symptomatic improvement. Breathing training should not be restricted to PD but be applied to all patients suffering from anxiety attacks.

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