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Anxiety sensitivity does not predict fearful responding to 35% carbon dioxide in patients with panic disorder. | LitMetric

Anxiety sensitivity does not predict fearful responding to 35% carbon dioxide in patients with panic disorder.

Psychiatry Res

Stress and Anxiety Clinical Research Unit, Royal Ottawa Hospital, 1145 Carling Avenue, K1Z 7K4, Ottawa, Canada.

Published: March 2001

The aim of the present study was to examine the relationship between anxiety sensitivity, as measured by the Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI), and four dimensions of behavioural reactivity to a single inhalation of 35% carbon dioxide (CO(2)) in 31 patients with panic disorder. ASI scores correlated positively with baseline State-Trait Anxiety Inventory scores but did not correlate with post-CO(2) scores. Correlational analyses revealed a significant, albeit modest, correlation between anxiety sensitivity and cognitive symptoms induced with CO(2). However, no significant association was found between anxiety sensitivity and other dimensions of CO(2)-induced anxiety, including severity of somatic symptoms, subjective levels of anxiety, fear or apprehension, and fear of the somatic symptoms induced by CO(2). Overall, these data do not support the view that anxiety sensitivity plays a key role in mediating behavioural sensitivity to CO(2) inhalation in panic disorder.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0165-1781(00)00245-6DOI Listing

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