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Dimensional structure of bodily panic attack symptoms and their specific connections to panic cognitions, anxiety sensitivity and claustrophobic fears
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 2813494
Author(s) Drenckhan, I.; Glöckner-Rist, A.; Rist, F.; Richter, J.; Gloster, A. T.; Fehm, L.; Lang, T.; Alpers, G. W.; Hamm, A. O.; Fydrich, T.; Kircher, T.; Arolt, V.; Deckert, J.; Ströhle, A.; Wittchen, H.-U.; Gerlach, A. L.
Author(s) at UniBasel Gloster, Andrew
Year 2015
Title Dimensional structure of bodily panic attack symptoms and their specific connections to panic cognitions, anxiety sensitivity and claustrophobic fears
Journal Psychological medicine
Volume 45
Number 8
Pages / Article-Number 1675-85
Abstract Background. Previous studies of the dimensional structure of panic attack symptoms have mostly identified a respiratory and a vestibular/mixed somatic dimension. Evidence for additional dimensions such as a cardiac dimension and the allocation of several of the panic attack symptom criteria is less consistent. Clarifying the dimensional structure of the panic attack symptoms should help to specify the relationship of potential risk factors like anxiety sensitivity and fear of suffocation to the experience of panic attacks and the development of panic disorder. Method. In an outpatient multicentre study 350 panic patients with agoraphobia rated the intensity of each of the ten DSM-IV bodily symptoms during a typical panic attack. The factor structure of these data was investigated with nonlinear confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). The identified bodily symptom dimensions were related to panic cognitions, anxiety sensitivity and fear of suffocation by means of nonlinear structural equation modelling (SEM). Results. CFA indicated a respiratory, a vestibular/mixed somatic and a cardiac dimension of the bodily symptom criteria. These three factors were differentially associated with specific panic cognitions, different anxiety sensitivity facets and suffocation fear. Conclusions. Taking into account the dimensional structure of panic attack symptoms may help to increase the specificity of the associations between the experience of panic attack symptoms and various panic related constructs.
Publisher Cambridge University Press
ISSN/ISBN 0033-2917 ; 1469-8978
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/50824/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1017/S0033291714002803
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25482960
ISI-Number WOS:000354035000010
Document type (ISI) Journal Article, Multicenter Study
 
   

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28/04/2024