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since: 14 May 2006

Anxiety patients perceive physical symptoms to be more intense than they are

posted Friday, 14 November 2008

Research conducted at the University of Granada, Spain for a doctoral thesis has found that patients with major anxiety disorders (panic disorder - with and without agoraphobia, social anxiety or generalized anxiety disorder) believe they experience greater physiological effects (palpitations, sweating, irregular breathing, shaking of the hands and muscular tension) than actually occurs. That is, although many patients with anxiety disorders report very intense physical symptoms in surveys and questionnaires, this is not supported by medical tests.

The research was conducted by Professor Mª Isabel Viedma del Jesus of the department of Personality, Evaluation and Physiological Treatment. It was carried out with 83 patients who had been diagnosed with either panic disorder - with and without agoraphobia, social anxiety, generalized anxiety, or a specific phobia.

The research also revealed that patients with less severe anxiety disorders such as a specific phobia (excessive and irrational fear of a particular object or situation) show high reactivity in physiological tests. Mª Isabel Viedma observed that there was a relationship between the propensity to react physiologically and the prognosis for therapeutic success. Patients with specific phobias tend to benefit most from cognitive-behavioral treatment. She concluded that the presence of physiological symptoms is a good predictor for improvement in anxiety disorder patients.

According to Prof Viedma, anxiety disorders are the most prevalent psycho-pathological problem in European countries. US statistics indicate the prevalence of specific phobias ranges between 8.8 and 12.5 percent of the population. Although few of those with specific fears are formally diagnosed with a phobia, nearly 11% have fears serious enough to affect their lives significantly.

Viedma emphasizes that, in the light of the results of her work, clinical evaluation of pathological anxiety should not only be evaluated with standard diagnostic questionnaires, but also psycho-physiological tests. "Our research work, she states "has important clinical implications with regard to the diagnose and prognosis of therapeutic success, as well as in the design of more effective intervention strategies in the field of anxiety disorders."

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