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Abstract+: Are Anxiety and Depression actually the same disorder?

posted Monday, 2 April 2007

Primary Psychiatry. 2007;14(4):15-16

Are Anxiety and Depression Actually the Same Disorder?

Sussman N.

The dilemmas facing clinicians who diagnose and treat psychiatric disorders are different than the issues that confront practitioners specializing in cardiology, endocrinology, hematology, gynecology, or virtually any other field of medicine.

In the case of most mental disorders, causation has not been established, diagnosis is based on clusters of symptoms, and treatments have a tendency to be non-specific. For example, I have given and heard lectures over the years on the differential diagnosis of depression and anxiety. Typically, variation in the focus of these talks included distinguishing between anxiety symptoms associated with depression, coexisting anxiety and depression, and mixed anxiety-depression. Often, these disorder distinctions seemed forced, with many points of differentiation reflecting a greater degree of diagnostic certainty than appeared to exist in real-world clinical care.

In both clinical and epidemiologic samples, major depressive disorder (MDD) and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) display substantial comorbidity and/or symptom overlap.

Source + full article...

© 2007 Primary Psychiatry a Publication of MBL Communications

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