Abstract

Thirty-eight cardiology patients with either atypical or nonanginal chest pain and current panic disorder were divided into two groups, those with agoraphobia ( N = 8) and those without agoraphobia ( N = 30). The agoraphobia group reported marginally longer duration of panic disorder (17.0 ± 21.1 years vs. 3.0 ± 3.2 years) and significantly more panic symptoms (10.6 ± 3 vs. 7.3 ± 2.2) during the last major attack. The agoraphobia group also scored significantly higher on measures of anxiety, depression, phobic avoidance, somatization, interpersonal sensitivity, and psychoticism and also scored higher on three of three global measures of distress. This agoraphobia group differed from previously reported agoraphobics with panic attacks in that they all had current panic disorder, while previously reported groups were categorized according to DSM-III, which required only a history of panic attacks. These findings suggest that patients who have current panic disorder and agoraphobia are more symptomatic. Of interest is the low proportion of agoraphobics compared to nonagoraphobics found in this panic disorder population.

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