Social anxiety symptoms across diagnoses among outpatients attending a tertiary care mood and anxiety disorders service.

J Affect Disord

Clinical Neuroscience Division, School of Medicine, University of Southampton, University Department of Mental Health, RSH Hospital, Brintons Terrace, Southampton, SO14 0YG UK.

Published: April 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Social phobia is prevalent among patients with mood and anxiety disorders, often accompanied by depressive symptoms, but its prevalence varies across different diagnoses.
  • A study involving 75 patients assessed depressive and social anxiety symptoms, finding that those with co-morbid diagnoses exhibited significantly higher social anxiety symptoms than those with a single diagnosis.
  • The research indicated moderate correlations between social anxiety and depression, particularly stronger in bipolar disorder compared to unipolar depression or anxiety disorders, highlighting the need for further research due to limitations like the small sample size.

Article Abstract

Background: Social phobia is a common, persistent and disabling anxiety disorder in which co-existing depressive symptoms are common. However the prevalence of social anxiety symptoms in patients with other mood and anxiety disorders is uncertain.

Method: In consecutive patients attending a tertiary referral mood and anxiety disorders service, depressive symptoms were assessed by the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) and social anxiety symptoms by the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS). The Clinical Global Impression of Severity (CGI-S) was completed following the appointment.

Results: 75 patients (48 women, 27 men; mean age 45.9 years) completed the study. 38 had a single diagnosis and 37 co-morbid diagnoses: 15 patients had bipolar disorder, 35 unipolar depressive disorder, 19 an anxiety disorder, and 6 other disorders. Independent samples t-tests and one-way between-subjects ANOVA revealed that the severity of social anxiety symptoms but not depressive symptoms was significantly greater in patients with co-morbid diagnoses (LSAS 73.7 vs 54.2, t(72)=2.44, p<.05; MADRS 21.9 vs 18.0, t(73)=1.76, p=.08; CGI-S 3.7 vs 3.2, t(73)=2.64, p<.05); and in anxiety disorders than in unipolar depression or bipolar disorder (respectively; LSAS 78.8 vs 59.4 vs 50.0, F(2, 65)=3.13, p=.05; MADRS 22.2 vs 19.8 vs 17.5, F(2, 66)<1, ns; CGI-S 3.9 vs 3.3 vs 3.1, F(2, 66)=5.43, p<.01). In the overall sample, correlation coefficients were MADRS and LSAS, R(2)=0.2628, p<.001; MADRS and CGI-S, R(2)=0.5863, p<.001; and LSAS and CGI-S, R(2)=0.327, p<.001. Correlations between MADRS and LSAS scores were higher in bipolar disorder (R(2)=0.4900, p<.01) than in unipolar depression (R(2)=0.376, p<.01) or anxiety disorders (R(2)=0.0041, ns).

Limitations: Small size of convenience sample undergoing varying treatments within a single specialist tertiary referral centre.

Conclusions: There was only a moderate correlation between depressive and social anxiety symptoms across a range of diagnoses. Depressive and social anxiety symptoms were most severe but least well correlated among tertiary care outpatients with anxiety disorders, emphasising the need for comprehensive evaluation and treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2008.06.003DOI Listing

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