Progressive validation of psychiatric syndromes: The example of panic disorder

Author(s):  
Kenneth S. Kendler

Prior validation approaches for psychiatric disorders, as used in DSM-IV and DSM-5, have been synchronic—snapshots of results typically taken out of temporal context. This chapter explores the advantages of a diachronic approach to validation. The discovery of juvenile-onset and adult-onset diabetes is explored as an example of a successful division of a broad biomedical syndrome into subtypes. This division has yielded fruitful insights into etiology and treatment. A psychiatric example, reviewed in detail, is the division of anxiety neurosis into panic disorder and generalized anxiety disorder. A range of etiologic and treatment studies have supported the distinction between these two forms of anxiety. These findings are interpreted in the context of Lakatos’s conceptual framework of a progressive versus degenerative scientific paradigm. The conclusion is that considering a diachronic or historical view of validity of psychiatric disorders adds a valuable perspective to the discipline and its nosology.

1995 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 379-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Milanfranchi ◽  
D Marazziti ◽  
C Pfanner ◽  
S Presta ◽  
P Lensi ◽  
...  

SummaryThe authors investigated the comorbidity between obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and other psychiatric disorders in a group of 154 outpatients. The influence of an associate major depressive disorder (MDD) on the outcome of treatment with clomipramine was examined in a subgroup of 52 patients. The results showed that MDD was the most frequent disorder associated with OCD (almost 20% of the patients), followed by generalized anxiety and panic disorder. The co-presence of depression delayed the effect of clomipramine.


2021 ◽  
pp. 109352662110422
Author(s):  
James R. Wright

It has been widely reported by historians that physicians were aware of two distinct types of diabetes mellitus by the 1880s, and that these were both similar to and the direct forerunners of type 1, juvenile-onset and type 2, adult-onset diabetes. The writings of prominent specialist physicians practicing just prior to the discovery of insulin in 1921–1922 were reviewed and there is little evidence that experts believed that adult and childhood diabetes were different. In fact, more than a decade passed after the discovery of insulin before diabetes in children and adults even began to be distinguished. Childhood diabetes was exceedingly rare in the early 20th century and diabetes was believed to be primarily a chronic disease of adults. It is interesting to speculate about what might have happened if the first pancreatic extract tests had been performed on adult-onset diabetics with insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus. Clearly, the results would have been disappointing and the discovery of insulin delayed. This essay explores how the test subject decision was made. It is fortuitous that a 14 year old boy with what was unequivocally type 1 diabetes was selected to be the first insulin recipient, and the rest is history.


Author(s):  
John C. Markowitz

This omnibus chapter covers anxiety disorders and other psychiatric disorders that may arise or be aggravated by the pandemic. Some anxiety is of course warranted in the midst of a crisis of ongoing risk and uncertainty; therapist and patient must try to separate appropriate from symptomatic anxiety. The chapter includes a discussion of prior IPT research for these disorders, appropriate IPT adaptations, and extended, detailed case examples illustrating the application of IPT to panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and social anxiety disorder. It also addresses how the pandemic may trigger or exacerbate other diagnoses for which IPT has shown benefit.


2000 ◽  
Vol 58 (2B) ◽  
pp. 408-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
ACIOLY L.T. LACERDA ◽  
DORGIVAL CAETANO ◽  
SHEILA C. CAETANO

Serum plasma total cholesterol levels were measured in 85 male or female outpatients with panic disorder (PD; N=41), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD; N=23) and major depression (MD; N=21) according to DSM-IV criteria. All the patients had a mean cholesterol level within the normal range; males (N=22) and females (N=63) had approximately the same serum cholesterol levels (p > .05). No significant differences in cholesterol levels emerged between PD, GAD and MD patient groups. Both female PD and female GAD subjects had a mean cholesterol level similar to their male counterparts (p>.05). It is concluded that both Hayward and colleagues and Bajwa et al. findings could not be replicated by our study.


Author(s):  
Christine M. Freitag
Keyword(s):  
Dsm 5 ◽  
Icd 10 ◽  

Die Autismus-Spektrum Störung (ASS) wird in DSM-5 als eine Erkrankung aus den ICD-10 bzw. DSM-IV TR-Diagnosen frühkindlicher Autismus, Asperger Syndrom und atypischer Autismus/PDD-nos zusammengefasst und weist entsprechend revidierte Kriterien auf. In dem vorliegenden Artikel werden diese Kriterien vergleichend dargestellt, Studien zu Validität und Reliabilität der neuen ASS-Diagnose präsentiert und offene Fragen diskutiert. Ein Ausblick auf die klinische und wissenschaftliche Bedeutung wird gegeben.


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