Abstract

Anxiety may be an accompanying or principal symptom in neurological syndromes. The physician may be challenged in such cases by the fact that primary or secondary anxiety may often considerably modify or mask neurological complaint patterns such as vertigo, epilepsy and disturbances of gait both in presentation and also in therapeutic response. This is a recurring problem facing specialists and clinicians in respect of differential diagnosis. The following paper sums up the entity of well-known and novel practice-oriented aspects of anxiety complaints in patients suffering from vertigo, epilepsy and gait disorders as seen from a neurological point of view.

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