1992
DOI: 10.1016/0165-1781(92)90058-b
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Smoking in patients with panic disorder

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1

Citation Types

4
59
0
7

Year Published

1997
1997
2014
2014

Publication Types

Select...
9
1

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 116 publications
(70 citation statements)
references
References 29 publications
4
59
0
7
Order By: Relevance
“…In particular, anxiety disorder diagnoses often have been collapsed across specific conditions into general categories that include various anxiety disorders (e.g., Breslau, 1995;Brown, Lewinsohn, Seeley, & Wagner, 1996;Degenhardt, Hall, & Lynskey, 2001;Kandel, Huang, & Davies, 2001). Similarly, several studies have examined the relation between certain specific anxiety disorders, such as panic disorder, but information regarding traumatic event exposure and posttraumatic stress problems has not been reported (e.g., Amering et al, 1999;Breslau & Klein, 1999;Johnson et al, 2000;Pohl, Yeragani, Balon, Lycaki, & McBride, 1992). Given the marked structural and functional differences between these various types of anxiety conditions and anxiety-related emotional states (Lang, 1993), these studies are useful for understanding anxiety disorder-smoking associations generally, but they are not appropriate for explicating the nature of the relations among smoking, traumatic , see table 1 and table 2 for an alphabetical listing of individual studies' key methodological characteristics and analytic approach/results, respectively.…”
Section: Study Selection Criteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, anxiety disorder diagnoses often have been collapsed across specific conditions into general categories that include various anxiety disorders (e.g., Breslau, 1995;Brown, Lewinsohn, Seeley, & Wagner, 1996;Degenhardt, Hall, & Lynskey, 2001;Kandel, Huang, & Davies, 2001). Similarly, several studies have examined the relation between certain specific anxiety disorders, such as panic disorder, but information regarding traumatic event exposure and posttraumatic stress problems has not been reported (e.g., Amering et al, 1999;Breslau & Klein, 1999;Johnson et al, 2000;Pohl, Yeragani, Balon, Lycaki, & McBride, 1992). Given the marked structural and functional differences between these various types of anxiety conditions and anxiety-related emotional states (Lang, 1993), these studies are useful for understanding anxiety disorder-smoking associations generally, but they are not appropriate for explicating the nature of the relations among smoking, traumatic , see table 1 and table 2 for an alphabetical listing of individual studies' key methodological characteristics and analytic approach/results, respectively.…”
Section: Study Selection Criteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recent studies have reported a closer relationship between smoking and anxiety disorders (11,12). There is good evidence for a causal relationship between smoking and the first panic attack (13,14).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…There is a recent and increasingly well-documented association between cigarette smoking and depressive and anxiety symptoms and disorders (Morrell & Cohen, 2006;Morissette, Tull, Gulliver, Kamholz, & Zimering, 2007;Patton, Carlin, Coffey, Wolfe, Hibbert, & Bowes, 1998). Indeed, epidemiological (Grant, Hasin, Chou, Stinson, & Dawson, 2004;Lasser, et al, 2000), community (Hayward, Killen, & Taylor, 1989) and clinical (Himle, Thyer, & Fischer, 1988;McCabe et al, 2004;Pohl, Yeragani, Balon, Lycaki, & McBride, 1992) studies have found that daily cigarette smoking is more common among those with anxiety and depressive psychopathology compared to those without such problems. Other studies have found that smoking, particularly at higher rates, increases the risk for developing and maintaining clinically significant anxiety and depressive symptoms (Breslau & Klein, 1999;Breslau, Novak, & Kessler, 2004;Goodwin, Lewinsohn, & Seeley, 2005;Isensee, Wittchen, Stein, Höfler, & Lieb, 2003;Johnson et al, 2000;Korhonen, et al, 2007;McLeish, Zvolensky, & Bucossi, 2007;Steuber & Banner, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%