Post by ghost on Dec 27, 2006 15:37:01 GMT -5
here's a copy of the wikipedia page on agoraphobia..
you can wiki it yourself to follow the links.. but i didn't do it here because wikipedia hijacks the whole page and won't let you get back to the forum..
Agoraphobia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jump to: navigation, search
Agoraphobia ICD-10 F40.00 Without panic disorder, F40.01 With panic disorder
ICD-9 300.22 Without panic disorder, 300.21 With panic disorder
Agoraphobia is a form of anxiety disorder. Sufferers of agoraphobia fear crowded situations, especially in a confined space, where anxiety may escalate into panic attacks. As a result, sufferers of agoraphobia are often confined to their homes and face difficulty traveling to the outdoors.
Contents
[hide]
1 Agoraphobia
2 Prevalence
3 Diagnosis
4 Treatments
5 Alternate academic theories
5.1 Attachment theory and agoraphobia
5.2 Spatial theory and agoraphobia
6 Famous Agoraphobics
7 See also
8 References
9 Footnotes
10 External links
[edit]
Agoraphobia
The word is an English adoption of the Greek words agora (áãïñÜ) and phobos (öüâïò). Literally translated in modern Greek as "a fear of the marketplace". A common misconception is that agoraphobia is a fear of open spaces. This is most often not the case since people suffering from agoraphobia usually are not afraid of the open spaces themselves, but of public spaces or of situations often associated with these spaces. The Greek word agora should be interpreted using the Ancient Greek meaning of the word agora (áãïñÜ) which translates as "where the people gather" (later "forum" in Latin), which gives the idea of a crowded marketplace rather than just an open space -- this makes the common combination of agoraphobia and claustrophobia less conflicting.
Agoraphobia today describes severe and pervasive anxiety about being in situations from which escape might be difficult or avoidance of situations such as being alone outside of the home; traveling in a car, bus, or airplane; or being in a crowded area (DSM-IV). Some people with agoraphobia are comfortable seeing visitors, but only in a defined space they feel in control of. Such people may live for years without leaving their homes, while happily seeing visitors and working, as long as they can stay within their safety zones.
An agoraphobic may experience severe panic attacks in situations where he feels trapped, insecure, out of control, or too far from his personal comfort zone. During severe bouts of anxiety, the agoraphobic is confined not only to his home, but to one or two rooms and he may even become bed-bound until his over-stimulated nervous system can quiet down, and his adrenaline levels can return to a more normal level.
Agoraphobics are often extremely sensitized to their own bodily sensations, subconsciously over-reacting to perfectly normal events. To take one example, the exertion involved in climbing a flight of stairs may be the cause for a full-blown panic attack, because it increases the heartbeat and breathing rate, which the agoraphobic interprets as the start of a panic attack instead of a normal fluctuation.
[edit]
Prevalence
The one-year prevalence of agoraphobia is about 5 percent. Agoraphobia occurs about two times more commonly among women than men (Magee et al., 1996 [1]). The gender difference may be attributable to social/cultural factors that encourage, or permit, the greater expression of avoidant coping strategies by women (DSM-IV), although other explanations are possible.
[edit]
Diagnosis
Most people who present to mental health specialists develop agoraphobia after the onset of panic disorder (American Psychiatric Association, 1998). Agoraphobia is best understood as an adverse behavioral outcome of repeated panic attacks and the subsequent worry, preoccupation, and avoidance. [2] Thus, the formal diagnosis of panic disorder with agoraphobia was established. However, for those people in communities or clinical settings who do not meet full criteria for panic disorder, the formal diagnosis of Agoraphobia Without History of Panic Disorder is used (DSM-IV).
[edit]
Treatments
Agoraphobia can be successfully treated in many cases through a very gradual process of graduated exposure therapy combined with cognitive therapy and sometimes anti-anxiety or antidepressant medications. Anti-anxiety medications include benzodiazepines such as alprozolam. Anti-depressant medications which are used to treat anxiety disorders are mainly in the SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) class such as sertraline, paroxetine and fluoxetine.
Treatment options for agoraphobia and panic disorder are similar.
[edit]
Alternate academic theories
[edit]
Attachment theory and agoraphobia
Some scholars (e.g., Liotti 1996 [3], Bowlby 1998 [4]) have explained agoraphobia as an attachment deficit, i.e., the temporary loss of the ability to tolerate spatial separations from a secure base.
[edit]
Spatial theory and agoraphobia
In the social sciences there is a perceived clinical bias (e.g., Davidson 2003 [5]) in agoraphobia research. Branches of the social sciences, especially geography, have increasingly become interested in what may be thought of as a spatial phenomenon.
[edit]
Famous Agoraphobics
Real
Paula Deen had agoraphobia at one point in her life
Philip K. Dick, American science fiction writer
Fictional
Arthur "Boo" Radley from the novel To Kill A Mockingbird
Ambrose Monk the brother of Adrian Monk from the television series Monk. Despite his agoraphobia he has made a decent living writing manuals for electronics.
Sigourney Weaver's character Dr. Helen Hudson, in Copycat.
Auric Goldfinger, in Ian Fleming's Goldfinger (James Bond Novel)
[edit]
See also
List of people with agoraphobia
[edit]
References
^ Magee, W. J., Eaton, W. W., Wittchen, H. U., McGonagle, K. A., & Kessler, R. C. (1996). Agoraphobia, simple phobia, and social phobia in the National Comorbidity Survey, Archives of General Psychiatry, 53, 159–168.
^ Barlow, D. H. (1988). Anxiety and its disorders: The nature and treatment of anxiety and panic. Guilford Press.
^ G. Liotti, (1996). Insecure attachment and agoraphobia, in: C. Murray-Parkes, J. Stevenson-Hinde, & P. Marris (Eds.). Attachment Across the Life Cycle.
^ J. Bowlby, (1998). Attachment and Loss (Vol. 2: Separation).
^ J. Davidson, (2003). Phobic Geographies
[edit]
Footnotes
Materials for this topic are obtained from the public domain source:
David Satcher etal. (1999). “Chapter 4.2”, Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General.
[edit]
External links
Mental Health Matters: Agoraphobia
Agoraphobia
Help for Agoraphobia
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agoraphobia"
Categories: Anxiety disorders | Phobias
you can wiki it yourself to follow the links.. but i didn't do it here because wikipedia hijacks the whole page and won't let you get back to the forum..
Agoraphobia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You have new messages (last change).
Jump to: navigation, search
Agoraphobia ICD-10 F40.00 Without panic disorder, F40.01 With panic disorder
ICD-9 300.22 Without panic disorder, 300.21 With panic disorder
Agoraphobia is a form of anxiety disorder. Sufferers of agoraphobia fear crowded situations, especially in a confined space, where anxiety may escalate into panic attacks. As a result, sufferers of agoraphobia are often confined to their homes and face difficulty traveling to the outdoors.
Contents
[hide]
1 Agoraphobia
2 Prevalence
3 Diagnosis
4 Treatments
5 Alternate academic theories
5.1 Attachment theory and agoraphobia
5.2 Spatial theory and agoraphobia
6 Famous Agoraphobics
7 See also
8 References
9 Footnotes
10 External links
[edit]
Agoraphobia
The word is an English adoption of the Greek words agora (áãïñÜ) and phobos (öüâïò). Literally translated in modern Greek as "a fear of the marketplace". A common misconception is that agoraphobia is a fear of open spaces. This is most often not the case since people suffering from agoraphobia usually are not afraid of the open spaces themselves, but of public spaces or of situations often associated with these spaces. The Greek word agora should be interpreted using the Ancient Greek meaning of the word agora (áãïñÜ) which translates as "where the people gather" (later "forum" in Latin), which gives the idea of a crowded marketplace rather than just an open space -- this makes the common combination of agoraphobia and claustrophobia less conflicting.
Agoraphobia today describes severe and pervasive anxiety about being in situations from which escape might be difficult or avoidance of situations such as being alone outside of the home; traveling in a car, bus, or airplane; or being in a crowded area (DSM-IV). Some people with agoraphobia are comfortable seeing visitors, but only in a defined space they feel in control of. Such people may live for years without leaving their homes, while happily seeing visitors and working, as long as they can stay within their safety zones.
An agoraphobic may experience severe panic attacks in situations where he feels trapped, insecure, out of control, or too far from his personal comfort zone. During severe bouts of anxiety, the agoraphobic is confined not only to his home, but to one or two rooms and he may even become bed-bound until his over-stimulated nervous system can quiet down, and his adrenaline levels can return to a more normal level.
Agoraphobics are often extremely sensitized to their own bodily sensations, subconsciously over-reacting to perfectly normal events. To take one example, the exertion involved in climbing a flight of stairs may be the cause for a full-blown panic attack, because it increases the heartbeat and breathing rate, which the agoraphobic interprets as the start of a panic attack instead of a normal fluctuation.
[edit]
Prevalence
The one-year prevalence of agoraphobia is about 5 percent. Agoraphobia occurs about two times more commonly among women than men (Magee et al., 1996 [1]). The gender difference may be attributable to social/cultural factors that encourage, or permit, the greater expression of avoidant coping strategies by women (DSM-IV), although other explanations are possible.
[edit]
Diagnosis
Most people who present to mental health specialists develop agoraphobia after the onset of panic disorder (American Psychiatric Association, 1998). Agoraphobia is best understood as an adverse behavioral outcome of repeated panic attacks and the subsequent worry, preoccupation, and avoidance. [2] Thus, the formal diagnosis of panic disorder with agoraphobia was established. However, for those people in communities or clinical settings who do not meet full criteria for panic disorder, the formal diagnosis of Agoraphobia Without History of Panic Disorder is used (DSM-IV).
[edit]
Treatments
Agoraphobia can be successfully treated in many cases through a very gradual process of graduated exposure therapy combined with cognitive therapy and sometimes anti-anxiety or antidepressant medications. Anti-anxiety medications include benzodiazepines such as alprozolam. Anti-depressant medications which are used to treat anxiety disorders are mainly in the SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) class such as sertraline, paroxetine and fluoxetine.
Treatment options for agoraphobia and panic disorder are similar.
[edit]
Alternate academic theories
[edit]
Attachment theory and agoraphobia
Some scholars (e.g., Liotti 1996 [3], Bowlby 1998 [4]) have explained agoraphobia as an attachment deficit, i.e., the temporary loss of the ability to tolerate spatial separations from a secure base.
[edit]
Spatial theory and agoraphobia
In the social sciences there is a perceived clinical bias (e.g., Davidson 2003 [5]) in agoraphobia research. Branches of the social sciences, especially geography, have increasingly become interested in what may be thought of as a spatial phenomenon.
[edit]
Famous Agoraphobics
Real
Paula Deen had agoraphobia at one point in her life
Philip K. Dick, American science fiction writer
Fictional
Arthur "Boo" Radley from the novel To Kill A Mockingbird
Ambrose Monk the brother of Adrian Monk from the television series Monk. Despite his agoraphobia he has made a decent living writing manuals for electronics.
Sigourney Weaver's character Dr. Helen Hudson, in Copycat.
Auric Goldfinger, in Ian Fleming's Goldfinger (James Bond Novel)
[edit]
See also
List of people with agoraphobia
[edit]
References
^ Magee, W. J., Eaton, W. W., Wittchen, H. U., McGonagle, K. A., & Kessler, R. C. (1996). Agoraphobia, simple phobia, and social phobia in the National Comorbidity Survey, Archives of General Psychiatry, 53, 159–168.
^ Barlow, D. H. (1988). Anxiety and its disorders: The nature and treatment of anxiety and panic. Guilford Press.
^ G. Liotti, (1996). Insecure attachment and agoraphobia, in: C. Murray-Parkes, J. Stevenson-Hinde, & P. Marris (Eds.). Attachment Across the Life Cycle.
^ J. Bowlby, (1998). Attachment and Loss (Vol. 2: Separation).
^ J. Davidson, (2003). Phobic Geographies
[edit]
Footnotes
Materials for this topic are obtained from the public domain source:
David Satcher etal. (1999). “Chapter 4.2”, Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General.
[edit]
External links
Mental Health Matters: Agoraphobia
Agoraphobia
Help for Agoraphobia
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agoraphobia"
Categories: Anxiety disorders | Phobias