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The natural history of anxiety disorders
J. Angst 1 , 2 M. Vollrath 1 , 2
  1 Research Department, Psychiatric University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland   2 J. Angst, Research Department, Psychiatric University Hospital, P.O. Box 68, CH-8029 Zurich, Switzerland
Copyright 1991 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
anxiety disorders • premorbid personality • childhood • life event • course and outcome

ABSTRACT

The article reviews research and presents our results on the natural history of 2 forms of anxiety disorder, panic disorder and generalized anxiety disorder. Data from our epidemiological cohort study give evidence of premorbid anxiousness and overadaptation already in childhood. Distressing conditions in the family are more prevalent among subjects with anxiety disorders or major depression than among controls. Anxiety disorders frequently begin between age 20–30 and can be triggered by life events. The course is often characterized by a certain chronicity that manifests itself in residual symptoms and mild impairment in social roles even after many years and is frequently complicated with depression. The best predictors are severity and duration of symptoms, as well as comorbidity with depression. Future studies of the natural history should take into account these factors in multivariate approaches.


Accepted for publication April 4, 1991

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1600-0447.1991.tb03176.x About DOI

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