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Clinical challenges in the diagnosis and treatment of anxiety are abundant in the general hospital setting: discerning normal from pathologic anxiety, differentiating medical from psychiatric causes, and choosing effective therapeutic approaches. In addition to a knowledge of medical and psychiatric differential diagnoses, the clinician may rely on a variety of strategies and interventions that involve pharmacologic, cognitive-behavioral, interpersonal, and psychodynamic skills. The ubiquity of anxiety and the non-specific nature of anxiety symptoms can confound the care of the patient. Pathologic anxiety symptoms and behavior may be attributed to other physical causes or, when viewed as “only anxiety,” may be prematurely dismissed as insignificant.
Anxiety refers to a state of anticipation of alarming future events, whereas fear is a result of perceived imminent threat. The former is the same distressing experience of dread and foreboding as the latter, except that it derives from an unknown internal stimulus or is inappropriate to the reality of the current situation. Anxiety is manifested in the physical, affective, cognitive, and behavioral domains. The possible physical symptoms of anxiety reflect autonomic arousal and include an array of bodily perturbations ( Table 13-1 ). The anxious state ranges from edginess and unease to terror and panic. Cognitively, the experience is one of worry, apprehension, and thoughts concerned with emotional or bodily danger. Behaviorally, anxiety triggers a multitude of responses concerned with diminishing or avoiding the distress.
Anorexia
“Butterflies” in stomach
Chest pain or tightness
Diaphoresis
Diarrhea
Dizziness
Dry mouth
Dyspnea
Faintness
Flushing
Headache
Hyperventilation
Light-headedness
Muscle tension
Nausea
Pallor
Palpitations
Paresthesias
Sexual dysfunction
Shortness of breath
Stomach pain
Tachycardia
Tremulousness
Urinary frequency
Vomiting
The importance of recognizing and attending to the suffering of the anxious patient is not always readily apparent, given the universality of the experience of anxiety. Anxiety is expected and normal as a transient response to stress and may be a necessary cue for adaptation and coping. Excessive or pathologic anxiety, however, is no more a normal state than is the production of excess thyroid hormone.
Pathologic anxiety is distinguished from a normal emotional response by four criteria: autonomy, intensity, duration, and behavior. Autonomy refers to suffering that, to some extent, has a life of its own, with a minimal basis in recognizable environmental stimuli. Intensity refers to the level of distress; the severity of symptoms is such that the patient's level of anguish moves the physician to offer relief. The duration of suffering also can define anxiety as pathologic. Symptoms that are persistent rather than transient, possibly adaptive, indicate a disorder and they are a call to evaluation and treatment. Finally, behavior is a critical criterion; if anxiety impairs coping, if normal function is disrupted, or if behavior such as avoidance or withdrawal results, the anxiety is of a pathologic nature.
Stereotyped syndromes of pathologic anxiety are described in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). Changes in the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for anxiety disorders include the re-categorization of obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and acute stress disorder. These syndromes will all be included in this chapter given the pervasiveness of anxiety and fear that is common to all of these disorders. In epidemiologic studies, anxiety disorders have been found to be among the most common psychiatric disorders in the general population. This observation predicts that a significant percentage of the general hospital population would also suffer from anxiety symptoms. Some patients suffer from an anxiety disorder before admission to the hospital for medical care, but medical and surgical settings are also associated with the onset of anxiety symptoms as a consequence of hospitalization, medical illness, or treatment (e.g., adjustment disorder with anxious mood and organic anxiety disorder).
Despite the protean physiologic manifestations of anxiety, the experience of anxiety can be divided into two broad categories: (1) an acute, severe, and brief wave of intense anxiety with impressive cognitive, physiologic, and behavioral components, and (2) a lower-grade persistent distress, quantitatively distinct and also with some qualitative differences. Pharmacologic and epidemiologic observations suggest a clinically relevant distinction between these two states.
In light of phenomenologic similarities, fear and anxiety most likely reflect a common underlying neurophysiology. The first category of anxiety resembles acute fear or alarm in response to life-threatening danger: a cognitive state of terror, helplessness, or sense of impending disaster or doom, with autonomic but primarily sympathetic activation, and an urgency to flee or seek safety. The second type of anxiety corresponds to a state of alertness with a heightened sense of vigilance to possible threats and with less intense levels of inhibition, physical distress, and behavioral impairment.
The two fear states resemble the clinical syndromes of panic attacks and generalized or anticipatory anxiety. As innate responses for protecting the organism and enhancing survival, panic and vigilance are normal when faced with threatening stimuli. As anxiety or psychopathologic symptoms, other factors besides actual physical threat must be implicated as triggers or causes. Of several explanatory models proposed, the biological model places emphasis on the nervous system, the psychodynamic on meanings and memories, and the behavioral on learning.
Animal and neuronal receptor studies suggest that a number of central systems are involved in fear and pathologic anxiety. The alarm or panic mechanism is likely to have a critical component involving central noradrenergic mechanisms, with particular importance placed on a small retropontine nucleus, the primary source of the brain's norepinephrine, the locus ceruleus (LC). When this key to sympathetic activation is stimulated in monkeys, for example, an acute fear response can be elicited with distress vocalizations, fear behaviors, and flight. Furthermore, destruction of the LC leads to abnormal complacency in the face of threat. Biochemical perturbations that increase LC firing similarly elicit anxious responses in animals and humans that are blocked by agents that decrease LC firing, some of which are in clinical practice as anti-panic agents (e.g., antidepressants, alprazolam).
Another critical system involves limbic system structures, including the amygdala and septohippocampal areas. An important role of the limbic system is to scan the environment for life-supporting and life-threatening cues, as well as to monitor internal or bodily sensations, and to integrate these with memory and cognitive inputs in assessing the degree of threat and need for action to maintain safety.
Vigilance, or its psychopathologic equivalent, generalized anxiety, most probably involves limbic system activity: limbic alert. Benzodiazepine receptors in high concentrations in relevant limbic system structures may play a role in modulating limbic alert, arousal, and behavioral inhibition by increased binding of the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). As one might expect, there are neuronal connections between the LC and the limbic system. An increased firing rate of LC neurons may serve as a rheostat to generate levels of arousal from vigilance to alarm.
A number of neurotransmitters are implicated as modulators of both the limbic alert and the central alarm systems. For example, LC firing is regulated by the α 2 -noradrenergic autoreceptors as well as by 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), serotonin receptors, GABA-benzodiazepine receptors, and opioid and other receptors. The limbic system also has important GABA-benzodiazepine receptor and serotonergic modulations. Peptides, such as cholecystokinin, have also been implicated as potential activators of the alarm system, and an accruing body of work points to abnormalities in corticotropin-releasing factor and hypothalamic–pituitary axis function as critical in the genesis and maintenance of pathologic affective states. As a critical function, the central security system is endowed with redundancy of regulation.
When inappropriately activated, vigilance and alarm (the stereotyped functions of the security system) are manifested as psychopathology: anxiety states. The more sustained, variably intense, but distressing arousal state of vigilance (i.e., preparation for threat) becomes generalized anxiety. The sudden, stereotyped, and intense (but false) alarm response is a panic attack.
Cognitive-behavioral formulations of anxiety disorders, although attending to possible differences in biological reactivity, focus primary attention on the information processing and behavioral reactions that characterize an individual's anxiety experience. Although anxiety patterns may stem from a variety of experiences, including (mis)information, observational learning, and direct conditioning events with real or perceived trauma, the enduring consequences of such learning can be found in current patterns of behavior. In cognitive-behavioral formulations, emphasis is placed on the role of thoughts and beliefs (cognitions) in activating anxiety, as well as on the role of avoidance or other escape responses in maintaining both fear and faulty thinking patterns. Faulty cognitions are frequently marked by the over-prediction of the likelihood or degree of catastrophe of negative events and may focus on external experiences (e.g., “my colleagues will laugh at me if I ask this question”) or internal experiences (e.g., “I am going to lose control if this anxiety gets worse”). Intolerance and catastrophic misinterpretations of the anxiety experience itself play a role in a variety of anxiety conditions and can help propel mild anxiety into a full, intense panic attack. Attempts to neutralize anxious feelings, with avoidance or compulsive behavior, can serve to lock in anxiety reactions and help to develop the chronic arousal and anticipatory anxiety that marks many anxiety disorders.
Recent evidence has offered a bridge between neurobiological and cognitive-behavioral understandings of anxiety. Increased attention has been paid to the consolidation of memories after traumatic experiences and potential therapeutic interventions (e.g., blocking of the noradrenergic or glucocorticoid systems to decrease the potential for developing PTSD after trauma). Knowledge of the N -methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) system's involvement in the extinction of learned behaviors has offered the possibility of pharmacologic enhancement of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) techniques. D-cycloserine, a partial NMDA agonist, has facilitated treatment of specific phobias, obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), panic disorder, and social anxiety disorders when combined with CBT.
Developmental experiences receive particular emphasis in psychodynamic approaches to anxiety. Although Freud's early writing implied a more physiologic basis for anxiety attacks in terms of undischarged libido, later emphasis was on anxiety as a signal of threat to the ego, signals elicited because of events and situations with similarities (symbolic or actual) to early developmental experiences that were threatening to the vulnerable child (traumatic anxiety), such as separations, losses, certain constellations of relationships, and symbolic objects or events (e.g., snakes, successes). More recently, psychodynamic thinking has emphasized object relations and the use of internalized objects to maintain affective stability under stress.
Phobic disorders, associated with the experience of panic, anticipatory anxiety, or no anxiety symptoms at all (depending on the success of avoidance behavior), serve to illustrate the different models of understanding anxiety. The biological view recognizes the stereotyped nature of phobias. Most of the objects and situations in everyday life that truly threaten us are rarely selected as phobic stimuli; children, who proceed normally through a variety of developmental phobias (e.g., strangers, separation, darkness), rarely become phobic of objects and situations that parents attempt to associate with danger (e.g., electric outlets and roads), and most phobic stimuli have meaning in the context of biological preparedness and were presumably selected through evolution. Most human phobias are of objects and situations that make sense in the context of enhancing survival before the dawn of civilization: places of restricted escape, groups of strangers, heights, and snakes, for example. Social phobias—for example, fear of scrutiny by others—resemble the intense discomfort elicited in primates introduced into a new colony or in any animal simply being stared at. A glare is a threat. When panic attacks and anticipatory anxiety heighten the general sense of danger and insecurity, a variety of phobias may be manifested as part of the patient's increased concern with security and safety.
The principal explanatory models in psychiatry of how a normal protective system might become the source of distress and dysfunction include the biological (with its emphasis on constitutional vulnerability), the cognitive-behavioral (with its emphasis on self-perpetuating patterns of cognitions and behaviors), and the psychodynamic (with its emphasis on meanings, memories, and internal representations derived from developmental experience). The pragmatic and pluralistic modern clinician should not regard these models as mutually exclusive. Potential biological vulnerabilities, for example, may never become manifest without specific developmental experiences, sustained adversity, or trauma. Accumulating evidence indicates that for anxiety disorders, as with affective and psychotic disorders, biological systems are responsive to, and perturbable by, environmental influences. Potentially dysregulated (i.e., anxiety-prone) neurobiological systems may remain homeostatic until developmental experience, life events, or other stressors disturb them. An integrated model predicts risk for manifested anxiety disorders as a consequence of constitutional vulnerability shaped by developmental experience (whether harmful or protective) and, in later (adult) life, either activated or influenced by environmental factors and maintained by ongoing chains of maladaptive cognitions and avoidance responses.
Although some distress from anxiety is expected as a routine consequence of hospitalization, anxiety may also be a significant clinical issue in the treatment of patients in a medical setting. The hospitalized patient encounters a world of both internal and external dangers: assaults on bodily integrity in the form of uncomfortable procedures and forced intimacy with strangers; the atmosphere of illness, pain, and death; and separation from loved ones and familiar surroundings. The patient typically experiences uncertainty about his or her illness and its implications for the patient's capacity to work and maintain social and family relationships. Just as depression has been described as a “psychobiological final common pathway” of a number of interacting determinants, it is likely that anxiety too represents a multiple-determined expression of the variety of psychological, biological, and social factors having impact on the patient.
The anxious patient can be a diagnostic challenge. The presence of anxiety may represent the patient's reaction to the meaning and implications of medical illness or to the medical setting, a manifestation of the physical disorder itself, or the expression of an underlying psychiatric disorder. The distinction between anxiety as a symptom and anxiety as a syndrome, may be difficult to make in the medical setting, where there may be an overlap between normal situational anxiety or fear, anxiety-like symptoms resulting from a variety of organic disease states and their treatments, and the characteristic presentation of anxiety disorders.
Methodological obstacles surface in attempts to identify the nature and prevalence of anxiety in medical patients. Studies of anxiety in the medical setting are often difficult to interpret because of a lack of clarity of case definition and assessment measures, heterogeneity of the study populations, absence of appropriate control groups, and the non-specific and often transitory nature of the anxiety symptoms themselves.
Approximately 60% of patients with psychiatric conditions are treated by primary care practitioners; the most common disorders are depression and anxiety. In a study of patients who presented to a group of primary care physicians, anxiety was the fifth most common diagnosis overall; others suggest this may be an underestimate. Anxiety is the chief complaint of 11% of patients presenting in primary care settings. This prevalence is mirrored by the high rate of prescribing benzodiazepines by primary care physicians. Panic disorder has a reported prevalence of 1% to 2% in the general population, as compared with 6% to 10% of patients in a primary care setting and 10% to 14% of patients in a cardiology practice. Patients with anxiety disorders, furthermore, are but a subgroup of those for whom anxiety is a complicating factor in their diagnosis and treatment in the hospital.
In view of the likely frequency of normal anxiety in this setting, there must be special circumstances surrounding those patients identified by primary caregivers as deserving psychiatric attention. Although some overly anxious patients go unrecognized, those who generate concern have impressed their caregivers in some way by the autonomy, intensity, duration, or behavior associated with their distress. Several typical scenarios of anxiety in the general hospital can be recognized.
For most patients, potentially overwhelming stressors of hospitalization are mitigated by a variety of coping mechanisms. The sources of threat and the flood of perceptions signaling potential danger are managed by common strategies: rationalization and self-reassurance (“I've come this far,” “the doctors know what they're doing,” “safest place in the world”); denial and minimization (“the chest pain is just heartburn,” “these machines will protect me”); religious faith; support from family and friends; and other strategies determined by the patient's personality style.
Even for those without a pre-illness anxiety disorder, coping strategies may fail and yield to a sense of fear and vulnerability. A host of factors may be implicated in this failure: personality features with brittleness or a tendency to regress in the face of threat (or paradoxically in a setting that evokes passivity and offers access to nurturance), the suddenness of the onset of threat (acute, life-threatening medical or surgical disease), unavailability of familial or other social support, feelings of aloneness or abandonment, or the unconscious meaning of the particular illness or injury. The patient becomes frightened, trembles, cannot sleep, repeatedly seeks attention and reassurance, registers excessive pain complaints and other physical symptoms, and becomes disruptive and unable to manage the fear. For many, especially the young or those with organic brain syndromes (e.g., mental retardation or dementia), catastrophic emotional responses are more readily triggered.
A psychiatric consultation request was received for a 17-year-old high school junior following an above-the-knee amputation for osteogenic sarcoma without evidence of metastasis at the time of surgery. He had returned to school with a prosthesis and had done well. Some months later, a pulmonary metastasis was discovered, and he was re-hospitalized for surgery and chemotherapy. Although anticipating a favorable outcome at this point, his behavior was unlike that of his prior hospitalization. He raged at caregivers, acted panicky, and withdrew from contact. Consultation was sought for treatment of his anxiety.
He was a tall, handsome, athletic young man admired by his peers, a leader who managed his life with braggadocio and pseudo-independence. For the first time in his illness, he was overwhelmed and frightened. Two critical issues emerged from the interview. First, in the past, he had had a great deal of support from his peers, but lately he had refused their visits. He was embarrassed by hair loss from chemotherapy. Second, during this hospitalization, his father, feeling overwhelmed by this turn of events, had decreased the frequency of visits to his son, claiming increased work demands.
Two interventions calmed the acute anxiety. First, an effort was made to find a well-suited wig; second, a psychotherapeutic contact with the father helped him to manage his grief adequately to increase the frequency of visits, and thereby relieve his son's separation anxiety.
Although the oncologist's request was for an anxiolytic prescription, recognition of the failure of coping ability yielded the appropriate therapy for the acute anxiety.
This case serves to underscore two points: previously well-adapted individuals can become anxious in the face of serious or life-threatening illness; and, despite the appropriateness of anxiety in the face of serious illness, other factors, potentially remediable, may be involved in triggering anxious symptoms or behavior. In this case, troublesome behavior was evident; for others, only more subtle physical symptoms may have occurred.
In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to the role of serious medical illness and invasive procedures in producing reactions that approach or meet criteria for PTSD. For example, symptoms of PTSD have been documented in patients after myocardial infarction (MI), coronary artery bypass graft surgery, and treatment for breast cancer, traumatic brain injury, and in those who require intensive care (a setting associated with increased morbidity and mortality). Estimates of rates of PTSD in these samples of patients range from 5% to 10%, with rates of PTSD in patients hospitalized after traumatic physical injuries as high as 30% to 40%. The emergence of PTSD is considered most likely when a traumatic event is perceived as both uncontrollable and life-threatening as such, any attempts to help patients regain or maintain a sense of control over their experiences may prevent or reduce emergent distress.
Ms. B, a 52-year-old woman with a history of depression, anxiety, chronic back pain, and severe peripheral vascular disease, was admitted to the hospital as preparation for a femoral artery–popliteal artery bypass. Consultation was requested for management of anxiety because surgery had previously been attempted but was aborted when the patient became acutely anxious when the staff began to disrobe her.
During the course of the consultation, Ms. B revealed that she had been the victim of a sexual assault at age 24. In the past, she had not needed treatment for symptoms related to this event. However, during the preparation for surgery, she began to re-experience her trauma while she was being disrobed.
Education was provided to Ms. B regarding the sequence of events that would take place leading up to and during the operation. The surgical staff was educated about the effects of past trauma and the need for special consideration regarding this patient. An agreement was made to allow the patient to disrobe herself prior to the initiation of the surgery. This increased her sense of control and she was able to tolerate the surgery, which went well.
This case demonstrates the importance of the events that take place during a hospitalization, but also a patient's prior experiences with trauma. By talking with Ms. B and identifying the historical factors as well as the present conditions that made this experience difficult for her, a plan was devised to alleviate as much of her anxiety as possible. Under these conditions, she was able to take a more active role and complete the necessary medical procedure.
Memory of events during anesthesia has been documented in controlled trials, leading to recommendations that the surgical staff provide reassurance to patients during surgery and monitor their own verbalizations in the presence of anesthetized patients. Intraoperative awareness occurs in 1–2 of every thousand cases and may occur with general anesthesia as well as with sedation/regional anesthesia. Risk factors for intraoperative awareness include use of light anesthesia (that is often used in conjunction with cardiac surgery, surgery following an acute trauma, and cesarean deliveries), and a history of intraoperative awareness. The modified Bruce interview is commonly used as a screening tool for the detection of intraoperative awareness. Intraoperative methods to reduce awareness of events include the use of monitoring end-tidal anesthetic concentration and the use of EEG-derived bispectral index to monitor levels of sedation. Both of these methods have proven effective at reducing rates of intraoperative awareness. Bispectral index is recommended when intravenous (IV) sedative–hypnotics or heterogeneous anesthetic agents are used primarily for sedation. End-tidal anesthetic gas concentration can be used if inhaled agents are utilized.
Reactions to awareness during surgery include generalized anxiety and irritability, repetitive nightmares, and preoccupation with death, as well as reluctance to discuss the memory or associated symptoms. More severe reactions have also been documented, including the full emergence of PTSD after experiences of awareness during surgery. Rates of PTSD after intraoperative awareness have been reported to be as high as 70%. Patients who are aware during surgery may face the terrifying experience of pain occurring in conjunction with anesthesia-induced paralysis (ensuring that no overt coping or escape responses are available), and fear of death. As memories of the trauma emerge, patients may face the full spectrum of PTSD symptoms, including: re-experiencing symptoms (intrusive memories, nightmares, and over-responsivity to cues of the surgery); avoidance of reminders of the experience (e.g., avoidance of strong emotions, prone bodily positions or sleep, medical television shows, colors similar to those of surgical scrub suits); and symptoms of pervasive autonomic arousal (e.g., exaggerated startle, sleep difficulties, hypervigilance, and irritability). Timely identification of this syndrome can aid in rapid referral for full psychiatric evaluation and treatment, which may include both cognitive-behavioral and pharmacologic interventions.
A request for consultation may be a consequence of anxiety that interferes with a patient's evaluation or treatment: refusal of work-up or treatment because of fear of pain or discomfort, catastrophic interpretation of physical symptoms or of the planned work-up (“they're looking for cancer”) with an excessively fearful response, or the need to minimize or deny a potentially serious condition and its implications, limiting cooperation with evaluation.
Examination of Mrs. C, a 38-year-old woman, revealed a large breast lump. Although initially reluctant, she eventually agreed to a mammogram. In the waiting room, she became increasingly anxious and, when her name was called, refused to come in for the test. A psychiatric consultation was called to provide management of the patient's anxiety to permit the mammogram.
An attractive woman, she had stopped working as a teacher 12 years earlier after marrying a successful business executive and having the first of her two children. On interviewing, she spoke of a favorite aunt who had died of breast cancer after disfiguring surgeries, and of her own fear of a similar lesion. She was plagued by the thought that the loss of a breast would cause her husband to lose interest and abandon her. She had not informed her husband of her current medical situation.
Meeting subsequently with both husband and wife, the psychiatrist gave explicit information about the possibility of malignancy and treatment options. The husband's manifest interest, support, and affection were reassuring; after the mammogram, a benign lump was removed.
Discovery of the meaning to the patient of the illness and the procedure permitted an intervention that sufficiently reduced her anxiety to allow evaluation and treatment. As with any situational anxiety, the fear of serious or fatal illness can be managed with education, support, cognitive and behavioral strategies, and at times, the short-term use of benzodiazepines.
Review of a patient's conceptualization of his or her medical condition, the procedures the patient faces, and the patient's interpretation of symptoms offers the physician the opportunity to correct cognitive distortions that may needlessly engender anxiety. Care should be taken in discussing symptoms and procedures, with sensitivity to an individual's coping style. The clinician should elicit the patient's conceptualization of his or her condition (or upcoming procedure) and provide corrective information when distortions are encountered.
Additional strategies may be helpful when phobias about select medical procedures are encountered. For example, the enclosed chamber of the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner presents a phobic challenge to some individuals, engendering fears of overwhelming anxiety because of the inability to “escape” the MRI scanner quickly. For individuals with a history of claustrophobia, panic disorder, or PTSD, pre-treatment with medications (e.g., benzodiazepines) or CBT may be required. In less severe cases, anxiety may be managed with simple procedures designed to maximize the patient's sense of safety and control. For example, compliance and comfort during the MRI scan may be aided by explaining to the patient the periods when he or she can shift positions or rub his or her hands together, the patient's ability to communicate with the nurse or technician, the patient's understanding of sounds and sensations to be experienced during the procedure, and the patient's ability to terminate the procedure, if need be. Initial practice of being moved into and out of the scanning chamber before the actual experience, as well as discussion of normal sensations of heat and anxiety experienced by patients while being scanned, can help normalize the experience and prevent catastrophic interpretations. There is evidence from analogue studies that information about the somatic sensations to be experienced during a procedure can help reduce anxiety and panic reactions. Instruction in comforting imagining may also aid the patient in tolerating the procedure.
Anxiety that occurs in patients with a known and potentially fatal illness is more accurately termed fear because there is a known danger. Such fear, however, can adversely affect the course of illness and treatment. A study of survivors of MI, for example, indicated that 95% had increased tension and anxiety, and of one group of post-MI patients discharged from the hospital, 40% did not return to work; in 80%, psychological impairment, including anxiety, was the cause.
Worry that activity will cause further heart damage or death interferes with rehabilitation and the return to autonomous function. The most effective therapeutic approaches for these patients center on education, group discussion, and support and stress management techniques. Anxious patients with a diagnosed serious or fatal illness require treatment that includes education in addition to the possible use of supportive, cognitive-behavioral, or insight-oriented psychotherapy and anxiolytic or antidepressant medications.
Among patients with medical disorders, such as gastrointestinal (GI) disorders or allergies, the course and symptoms of the illness may be exacerbated by anxiety. Anxiety, as with other emotional responses, may adversely affect normal physiologic function; asthma symptoms are exacerbated by emotional arousal or stress, and the increased symptoms generate further anxiety. Psychological and emotional responses and behavior possibly affect the survival of patients with cancer through effects on the immune system.
Anxiety symptoms may be the principal manifestation of an underlying medical illness. Of patients referred for psychiatric treatment, 5% to 42% have been reported as having an underlying medical illness responsible for their distress, with depression and anxiety as frequent complaints. Of reported cases of medical illnesses causing anxiety symptoms, 25% have been secondary to neurologic problems; 25% to endocrinologic causes; 12% to circulatory, rheumatoid, or collagen vascular disorders and chronic infection; and 14% to miscellaneous other illnesses. A most common cause of anxiety may be alcohol and drug use; the anxiety results from either intoxication or, more typically, withdrawal states.
The clinical presentation of anxiety in the medical setting takes many forms. The bewildering array and variable nature of the physical and psychic symptoms reported by anxious patients may lead the physician to overlook symptoms related to another disorder. The relative contribution of situational, psychiatric, and physiologic factors to the presentation of anxiety-like symptoms in a medical patient is often murky. The number of medical illnesses, furthermore, that may generate or exacerbate anxiety symptoms ( Table 13-2 ) clearly renders an exhaustive evaluation for each of them impractical. A thorough yet efficient evaluation of the differential diagnostic possibilities, however, includes the following considerations:
In a patient with a known medical illness, the condition and its associated complications and treatment may be the cause of anxiety. For example, in the asthmatic patient, hypoxia, respiratory distress, and sympathomimetic bronchodilators may all contribute to the experience of anxiety. In some patients, risk factors or predisposition, such as a family history of medical illness capable of causing anxiety-like symptoms (e.g., thyroid disease), may be clues to diagnosis.
In medical illnesses considered mimics of anxiety, the quality of anxiety symptoms when closely examined may be different from that seen in primary anxiety disorders. For example, Starkman and associates studied 17 patients with pheochromocytoma and compared their anxiety symptoms with those of a group of 52 patients with anxiety and related disorders. Most patients with pheochromocytoma did not meet the criteria for panic disorder or generalized anxiety disorder (GAD); none developed agoraphobic symptoms, and their overall severity of symptoms was lower. There was a significant lack of psychological as opposed to physical symptoms of anxiety in most of these patients.
Similarly, patients with primary anxiety disorders are more likely to have emotional trauma related to the onset of anxiety, daily symptoms, neurotic features, and gradual resolution of symptoms after an attack and are less likely to have a loss of speech or consciousness during an episode of anxiety than are patients with anxiety associated with temporal lobe epilepsy. Thus, the lack of a significant emotional experience of anxiety or the occurrence of anxiety only coincidental with particular physical events (e.g., a run of ventricular tachycardia on a cardiac monitor or spike activity on an electroencephalogram) may suggest the presence of an organic anxiety syndrome. Evaluation directed toward the somatic system (e.g., GI or cardiac) most prominently affected by anxiety symptoms may provide the greatest yield from further diagnostic investigations.
In patients with an onset of anxiety symptoms after the age of 35 years, a lack of personal or family history of anxiety disorders, a negative childhood history of anxiety symptoms, an absence of significant life events heralding or exacerbating anxiety symptoms, a lack of avoidance behavior, and a poor response to standard anti-anxiety agents, the presence of an organically based anxiety syndrome should be considered.
Even for the apparently healthy patient, particular scrutiny should be directed at more common conditions associated with anxiety: arrhythmias, thyroid abnormalities, excessive caffeine intake, and other drug use. Anxiety-like symptoms may be the first clue to a withdrawal syndrome in a patient with unreported regular sedative–hypnotic (e.g., ethchlorvynol, glutethimide, or a benzodiazepine) or alcohol use before admission to the hospital. Intoxication or withdrawal from prescription or over-the-counter medication or substances of abuse should also be suspected. Up to 3% of individuals have been reported to develop psychiatric symptoms after using prescribed or over-the-counter medication.
A psychiatric consultation was requested from the medical service for Ms. D, a 31-year-old secretary, who developed anxiety attacks shortly after learning that she had contracted syphilis from her boyfriend. She had previously experienced spontaneous anxiety attacks in her mid-20s that had remitted early in a 6-month course of the TCA imipramine, and she had been symptom-free since. During the interview with the psychiatrist, Ms. D manifested anger and sadness about her boyfriend's infidelity and her own victimization, as well as anxiety about the future of their relationship. Her anxiety attacks, however, were different from those she had previously experienced. They consisted of blurred vision; dull bi-parietal headaches, primarily left-sided; numbness in her extremities; and feelings of dizziness. She reported feeling anxious after the onset of these symptoms. On further questioning, Ms. D described a history of menstrual irregularities over the past 2 to 3 years, and galactorrhea. Her prolactin level was found to be elevated, and a computed tomography scan revealed a pituitary adenoma. Surgical resection of the adenoma resulted in resolution of her anxiety attacks, although she elected to pursue psychotherapy to consider issues raised by the difficulties in her relationship.
This case serves to illustrate the following points. The presence of a history of an anxiety disorder or a recent stressor does not eliminate the need to consider medical illness in the differential diagnosis of a new or different presentation of anxiety. Ms. D's experience of anxiety attacks was primarily somatic, and it was fortuitous that she had a history of more typical anxiety attacks for comparison; the nature of her symptoms led to a careful exploration for neurologic disease and allowed an appropriate and timely intervention.
Adrenal cortical hyperplasia (Cushing's disease)
Adrenal cortical insufficiency (Addison's disease)
Adrenal tumors
Carcinoid syndrome
Cushing's syndrome
Diabetes mellitus
Hyperparathyroidism
Hyperthyroidism
Hypoglycemia
Hypothyroidism
Insulinoma
Menopause
Ovarian dysfunction
Pancreatic carcinoma
Pheochromocytoma
Pituitary disorders
Premenstrual syndrome
Testicular deficiency
Analgesics
Antibiotics
Anticholinergics
Anticonvulsants
Antidepressants
Antihistamines
Antihypertensives
Antiinflammatory agents
Antiparkinsonian agents
Aspirin
Caffeine
Chemotherapy agents
Cocaine
Digitalis
Hallucinogens
Neuroleptics
Steroids
Sympathomimetics
Thyroid supplements
Tobacco
Ethanol
Narcotics
Sedative–hypnotics
Anemia
Cerebral anoxia
Cerebral insufficiency
Congestive heart failure
Coronary insufficiency
Dysrhythmias
Hyperdynamic β-adrenergic state
Hypovolemia
Mitral valve prolapse
Myocardial infarction
Type A behavior
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