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Title: Panic-fear in asthma. Symptomatology as an index of signal anxiety and personality as an index of ego resources. Author: Dirks JF, Kinsman RA, Staudenmayer H, Kleiger JH. Journal: J Nerv Ment Dis; 1979 Oct; 167(10):615-9. PubMed ID: 490148. Abstract: Clinical observations and studies of asthmatic patients have often concluded that therre is a strong relationship between the degree of the patient's anxiety and the medical intractability of his illness. However, psychotherapeutic interventions designed to alleviate patient anxiety have been noticeably inconsistent in achieving meaningful alleviation of the patient's asthma. The present paper addresses this apparent paradox by positing the existence of two types of anxiety: a) asthma-specific anxiety, as indexed by Panic-Fear symptomatology scores of the Asthma Symptom Checklist; and b) characterological and pervasive anxiety, as indexed by Panic-Fear personality scores of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. In this study, long term medical outcome was found to be influenced by the combination of these types of anxiety. Wehn high asthma-specific anxiety coexisted with high characterological anxiety, medical outcome following intensive long term medical treatment was exceptionally poor. In contrast, when high asthma-specific anxiety coexisted with average levels of characterological anxiety, medical outcome was exceptionally good. These results are discussed relative to the theoretical distinctions between signal anxiety and anxiety concomitant with a lack of basic ego resources.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]