AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the relationship between childhood anxiety disorders and the development of panic disorder in both referred adults with panic disorder and a comparison group without major anxiety.
  • A significant percentage of adults with panic disorder had a history of childhood anxiety or disruptive behavior disorders, indicating a link between early mental health issues and later anxiety problems.
  • The analysis identified separation anxiety and overanxious disorder as key predictors for the onset of panic disorder, suggesting that childhood anxiety disorders play a crucial role in the risk for adult panic disorder, regardless of whether individuals were referred for treatment or not.

Article Abstract

Objective: We used a recursive partitioning method to examine antecedent childhood anxiety disorders in large samples of referred and nonreferred subjects with and without panic disorder.

Methods: Referred subjects included adults treated for panic disorder (n = 131) and comparison adults with neither major anxiety nor mood disorders (n = 61). The nonreferred adult group derived from an opportunistic sample originally ascertained through family studies of probands with and without attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), yielding 58 adults with panic disorder and 587 who were free of major anxiety and mood disorders.

Results: The majority of referred (65%) and nonreferred (52%) adults with panic disorder had antecedent childhood anxiety or disruptive behavior disorders. Classification and Regression Trees (CART) analysis showed that both separation anxiety disorder and overanxious disorder were independent predictors of subsequent panic disorder in both referred and nonreferred samples.

Conclusions: These results confirm and extend previously reported findings by documenting that childhood anxiety disorders are important antecedent risk factors for panic disorder, independently of referral bias.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/cap.2005.15.549DOI Listing

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