1973
DOI: 10.1097/00006842-197305000-00008
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Multidimensional Analysis of the Subjective Symptomatology of Asthma

Abstract: Characteristics of the subjective symptomatology of asthma were explored within a group of 100 asthma inpatients. Patients rated the relative frequency with which 77 symptom adjectives were associated with asthma attacks. Key cluster analysis of the full set of 77 adjectives identified 5 symptom clusters: Two Mood clusters, Panic-Fear and Irritability, describe affective states concomitant with asthma, while two Somatic clusters, Hyperventilation-Hypocapnia and Bronchoconstriction, describe reports of more spe… Show more

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Cited by 211 publications
(112 citation statements)
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“…By using STAI-Y, the average values for the anxiety trait (i.e., a measure for an individual's tendency for anxiety) were higher than those found in other studies for the Portuguese population (Santos & Silva, 1997;Silva & Campos, 1998) and that have been used as standard references. These characteristics agree with some other previous studies (Boulet et al, 1991;Chetta et al, 1998) which argue that there is a strong link between anxiety trait and asthma, as well as a greater manifestation of the symptoms of this ailment (Kinsman et al, 1973;Dirks et al, 1978;Friedman & Booth-Kewley, 1987;Yellowlees & Kalucy, 1990). More recently Rimington et al (2001) further supports this notion and states that as anxiety increases (state and trait) a poorer quality of life is evidenced, and Baumeister et al (2005) makes similar observations between higher anxiety and less asthma control (Thomas et al, 2011).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…By using STAI-Y, the average values for the anxiety trait (i.e., a measure for an individual's tendency for anxiety) were higher than those found in other studies for the Portuguese population (Santos & Silva, 1997;Silva & Campos, 1998) and that have been used as standard references. These characteristics agree with some other previous studies (Boulet et al, 1991;Chetta et al, 1998) which argue that there is a strong link between anxiety trait and asthma, as well as a greater manifestation of the symptoms of this ailment (Kinsman et al, 1973;Dirks et al, 1978;Friedman & Booth-Kewley, 1987;Yellowlees & Kalucy, 1990). More recently Rimington et al (2001) further supports this notion and states that as anxiety increases (state and trait) a poorer quality of life is evidenced, and Baumeister et al (2005) makes similar observations between higher anxiety and less asthma control (Thomas et al, 2011).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The Asthma Symptom Checklist (ASC) is a reliable and valid 36-item self-report measure of subjective asthma symptomatology and it consists of five subscales: panic-fear, irritability, fatigue, hyperventilation, and bronchoconstriction [20]. Participants rate the frequency with which symptoms occur in connection with asthma exacerbation.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Asthma Symptom Checklist (ASC) [20,21] contains 36 items and describes the subjective symptomatology of asthma. Six subscales comprise the ASC: symptoms of airway obstruction (OBS), dyspnoea, fatigue (FAT), symptoms suggestive of hyperventilation, anxiety, irritation (IRR).…”
Section: Outcome Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%