AI Article Synopsis

  • Distress intolerance plays a crucial role in both panic disorder and smoking behavior, suggesting a potential link between the two.
  • An experimental study involving smokers found that lower distress tolerance was associated with higher anxious responses to stressors, which could worsen symptoms of nicotine withdrawal and panic after challenging situations.
  • Overall, the findings indicate that how individuals respond anxiously to stress may help explain their experiences of panic symptoms and nicotine withdrawal in the context of perceived distress intolerance.

Article Abstract

Background: Distress intolerance is linked to the maintenance of panic disorder and cigarette smoking, and may underlie both problems.

Method: Smokers (n = 54; 40.7% panic disorder) were recruited for an experimental study; half were randomly assigned to 12-hour nicotine deprivation and half smoked as usual. The current investigation consisted of secondary, exploratory analyses from this larger experimental study. Four distress intolerance indices were examined as predictors of anxious responding to an emotional elicitation task (10% carbon dioxide (CO2)-enriched air challenge); anxious responding was in turn examined as a predictor of post-challenge panic and nicotine withdrawal symptoms.

Results: The Distress Tolerance Scale (DTS) was significantly negatively associated with anxious responding to the challenge (β = -0.41, p = 0.017). The DTS was negatively associated with post-challenge increases nicotine withdrawal symptoms indirectly through the effect of anxious responding to the challenge (b = -0.485, CI95% (-1.095, -0.033)). This same indirect effect was found for post-challenge severity of panic symptoms (b = -0.515, CI95% (-0.888, -0.208)). The DTS was directly predictive of post-challenge increases nicotine withdrawal symptoms, in the opposite direction (β = 0.37, p = 0.009), but not panic symptom severity.

Conclusions: Anxious responding in response to stressful experiences may explain the impact of perceived distress intolerance on panic and nicotine withdrawal symptom expression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6561481PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269881115575536DOI Listing

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