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Generalised anxiety disorder [PDF]

open access: possibleEvidence-Based Mental Health, 2004
The EBMH Notebook summarises key messages about generalised anxiety disorder, sourced from: Clin Evid Concise2004 (in press); www.clinicalevidence.com. For this review, Clinical Evidence Concise searched and appraised material published until June 2003. Generalised anxiety disorder (GAD) is defined as excessive worry and tension about every day events
Mark Oakley-Browne, Chris Gale
openaire   +7 more sources

Anxiety disorders

Clinical Psychology Review, 1998
Research has only recently begun to address the nature and treatment of anxiety in later life. Prevalence rates suggest that anxiety disorders occur more than twice as frequently as depression among older adults, with the highest rates reported for generalized anxiety disorder and phobias.
M A, Stanley, J G, Beck
openaire   +5 more sources

Anxiety disorders

European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2012
With the adoption of a developmental psychopathology perspective, the DSM-5 translates empirical evidence on the continuity of childhood anxiety disorders into diagnostic practice, thereby completing a process that started with the exclusion of the former childhood anxiety disorders overanxious disorder and avoidant disorder from DSM-III to DSM-IV ...
Cornelia Mohr, Silvia Schneider
openaire   +3 more sources

The Anxiety Disorders

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1984
Anxiety commonly accompanies serious illness. However, in some patients anxiety is the primary manifestation of illness. Diagnostic criteria for these "primary" anxiety disorders have been redefined in the most recent revision of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. We discuss these new diagnostic categories; review
J T Brown, G A Stoudemire, C D Mulrow
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Disability in anxiety disorders

Journal of Affective Disorders, 2014
This study compares disability levels between different anxiety disorders and healthy controls. We further investigate the role of anxiety arousal and avoidance behaviour in disability, and whether differences in these symptom patterns contribute to disability differences between anxiety disorders.Data were from 1826 subjects from the Netherlands Study
Florian Hardeveld   +10 more
openaire   +9 more sources

Anxiety disorders

2018
Abstract Anxiety is a common feeling, but also the central symptom of several psychiatric disorders: generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, phobias, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Anxiety disorders are common and important in general medical practice as they often manifest with physical symptoms such as palpitations, chest ...
Ted Liao, Steven Epstein
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Anxiety disorders

Nature Reviews Disease Primers, 2017
Anxiety disorders constitute the largest group of mental disorders in most western societies and are a leading cause of disability. The essential features of anxiety disorders are excessive and enduring fear, anxiety or avoidance of perceived threats, and can also include panic attacks.
Michelle G, Craske   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Psychobiology of Anxiety and Anxiety Disorders

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1985
New techniques for studying receptor pharmacology, neurotransmitter activity, and neuroendocrine function in affective illness have made it possible to carry out sophisticated neurochemical and neuropharmacologic investigations of the anxiety disorders.
John M. Rainey, Randolph M. Nesse
openaire   +3 more sources

The genetics of anxiety disorders

Acta Neuropsychiatrica, 1999
The common denominator of anxiety disorders is that they share inappropriate levels of emotions and cognitions that affect rather than enable adaptive behaviours. The variety of symptoms include ‘spontaneous’ panic attacks with mental and physical symptoms, stimulus bound anxiety associated with avoidance behaviour, and almost constant ‘generalized ...
Van De Wetering, B. J.M.   +2 more
openaire   +5 more sources

Neurocircuitry of Anxiety Disorders

Focus, 2003
A major focus in the field of anxiety in the past decade, and an area of intense ongoing interest, is the delineation of the basic neurocircuitry underlying normal and pathologic anxiety. Preclinical work defining the basic neurocircuitry responsible for fear responding has fueled neuroimaging investigations attempting to model the neurocircuitry of ...
Justine M. Kent, Scott L. Rauch
openaire   +4 more sources

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