Diagnostic dilemmas
Epidemiological research on anxiety over the past decade has served to refine the categorical diagnoses of anxiety disorders through succeeding editions of the DSM. As the data from the National Comorbidity Survey indicate, however, comorbidity is common with this group of disorders (
1). In some disorders, such as generalized anxiety disorder, comorbidity is the rule rather than the exception (
7). In many other anxiety disorders, it is not unusual for two or more diagnosable conditions to coexist or for there to be some symptomatic overlap between an anxiety disorder and subsyndromal states, especially symptom overlap between different anxiety disorders and between anxiety and depression (
8).
Because of this extensive comorbidity and the absence of specific etiological factors and specific treatments, researchers suggested that a dimensional model might be more useful for studying and treating these conditions (
9). In the dimensional approach, the disorder is seen as a complex of coexisting symptomatic dimensions, such as panic, anticipation, obsessiveness, and avoidance. Each of these dimensions can be used in research to correlate hypothetical, biological, or genetic factors. Each dimension also may require a distinct biological or psychological treatment approach (e.g., behavioral treatment for panic or specific medication for treatment of obsessive trends). One of the fruitful ways of making a dimensional diagnosis is to analyze psychometric rating scales that have been designed to measure personality characteristics or symptoms of a specific condition. The comparative usefulness of dimensional and categorical diagnoses is a highly debated issue in research and in clinical practice. Both approaches are acceptable, depending on the circumstances. For example, the categorical diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) may be more useful in a clinical discussion of a patient, whereas a dimensional delineation of “obsessiveness” may be more useful in research seeking a gene responsible for this symptom.
Similarities between disorders and categorical/dimensional perspectives led to the introduction of the term “spectrum disorders,” a phrase initially developed for OCD (
10). This conceptualization was helpful in evaluating similar responses to pharmacological and psychological treatments, and it led to the development of other spectrums, including social anxiety, panic-agoraphobic, and posttraumatic spectrum disorders (
11–
13). Although this approach is useful, it may be overinclusive and misleading, as it lumps together disorders that have little in common (such as pathological gambling and body dysmorphic disorders in OCD spectrum).
Dimensional/categorical diagnosis is usually produced by cross-sectional observation. However, the diagnostic presentation may be better understood as a psychopathological process. For example, obsessive and compulsive symptoms are related, since compulsions are usually designed to counteract a threat, and anxiety is associated with obsessive thought. In medical diseases, symptoms usually represent a combination of a noxious agent and the body’s reaction to its presence. Psychiatric symptoms may behave the same way. Thus, anxiety disorders may be viewed as a sequential process of the emergence of initial symptoms and inadequate mental or behavioral attempts to deal with the perceived problem.
For example, panic disorder (see Table 2) may start as an initial devastating panic attack that leads to an increased concern about personal health and safety. This concern then leads to a medical workup, which initially calms the fear. However, worry and anticipation of another, imminent attack persist because of an abnormal catastrophic perception of the events that created the situation, and no amount of reassurance is enough to allay the patient’s fears. This leads to an increase in “safety” coping behaviors, such as having repeated medical examinations, carrying a cell phone, and having a “safe” person around at all times. Unfortunately, since absolute “safety” can never be found, these behaviors become more and more extensive and unreasonable and induce more anxiety, starting the vicious cycle of the disorder and leading to even more inappropriate coping, such as agoraphobic avoidance, eventually resulting in despair and depression.
Most of the anxiety disorders follow this process, although different stages may predominate in different disorders (e.g., ritualistic behavior is more characteristic of OCD, and avoidance predominates in social anxiety disorder). Understanding the process of the disorder and the core fears and coping strategies may lead to more precise diagnosis and help in the biological and psychological management of the disorder. Lack of such an understanding may lead to the misdiagnosis of an anxiety disorder as another one with a similar presentation. For example, in public speaking phobia, the patient may have a fear of being evaluated, which is more a component of social anxiety disorder, or a fear of mispronouncing words, which is more OCD-like. Both will result in avoidance of social situations, but the two would be managed differently.
Biological and psychological factors
To effectively treat an anxiety disorder, the clinician must understand how the condition emerges and what factors contribute to its maintenance. One of the major advances in anxiety research in recent years is our better understanding of the interplay of genetic, biological, and stress factors in the presentation of anxiety disorders. Study of the genetic underpinnings of anxiety disorders using the most modern techniques have yet to identify a gene or even multiple gene solutions for any single anxiety disorder, although some interesting findings have been reported for OCD and agoraphobia (
14,
15). However, family and twin studies suggest that some genetic components may be shared between different anxiety disorders, depression, and alcohol and drug abuse (
16). Currently, it is not clear what exactly is inherited in anxiety disorders.
One possibility is that abnormal cognitions could be the inherited factor. Cognitive theory assigns primary importance to abnormal or “catastrophic” cognitions as an underlying mechanism of all of the anxiety disorders. Most of the cognitive strategies for treatment and research were developed long ago. Recently, there has been a shift to the recognition of abnormal information processing in anxiety disorders. In a majority of anxiety disorders, information about threat is processed in a very peculiar way. Patients typically catalog the information in excessive detail or divide the information into “good” and “bad,” with no gray area in between, and later question whether or not the threat exists. Under these circumstances, the only safe way to deal with the situation is to consider the worst-case scenario (i.e., using catastrophic cognition) and then act to protect oneself against the danger.
Stress also plays a major role in the pathology of anxiety disorders, and in PTSD it is the main etiological factor. Although the role of stress is less apparent in other anxiety disorders, patients can often date the onset of their disorder to a strong stress event or to a period of continuous, persistent stress. It is well known that anxiety disorders are stress dependent. For example, increased stress usually accounts for relapses in chronic anxiety conditions such as generalized anxiety disorder. Recent findings also indicate that stress produced by an event or by a persistent and chronic disorder is capable of causing secondary biological changes in specific brain structures (
17,
18).
The relationship between biological factors, genetic factors, and stress is a complex one. Catastrophic stresses, such as those associated with PTSD, can produce a disorder even in the absence of damage to the brain or a genetic predisposition to the disorder. At the same time, damage to the brain or heightened genetic vulnerability, as in the case of patients who have multiple relatives suffering from an anxiety disorder, can be a cause of anxiety with minimal or no stress. Most patients, however, are in between these extremes, and typically there is some interplay of the various factors. Clinicians need to address this complex interplay of factors in order to have a complete picture of the patient’s psychopathology and to develop a sound treatment plan. This approach calls for a revision or expansion of axis IV of DSM-IV-TR to account for the acuity, severity, and duration of stress.
Chronic stress in patients with anxiety and mood disorders can cause dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (
18). In addition, acute and chronic stress causes an elevation in glutamate levels that can cause secondary toxicity in some parts of the brain, such as the hippocampus, which can account for the reduction of hippocampal volume seen in patients with PTSD (
19). Biological investigations of the stress system in anxiety disorders are scarce, and more research in this area is needed. Such research is complicated by the fact that chronic psychiatric illnesses such as OCD, generalized anxiety disorder, and PTSD frequently lead to decreases in functioning (e.g., loss of job or relationships), which can produce the secondary stress.
Biological factors are of primary importance in anxiety disorders. Anxiety disorders can occur in the context of medical illness, for example. The list of medical conditions that should be considered in the differential diagnosis of anxiety disorder is extensive (see Table 3). The clinician should consider the possibility of an intricate, manifold relationship between medical illnesses and anxiety disorders. Metabolic or autonomic abnormalities caused by an illness could produce the syndrome of anxiety—for example, hyperthyroidism could produce panic attacks. The symptoms of a medical illness could serve as a trigger for anxiety, such as the sensation of an abnormal heartbeat in arrhythmia triggering a panic attack. Sometimes the medical illness mimics the anxiety disorder, as with perseveration in mental retardation and OCD. Finally, medical illness and an anxiety disorder could simply coexist. Among the most interesting interactions between medical illness and anxiety disorders studied in recent years are the pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections (PANDAS) observed in a subset of OCD patients (
20).
In recent years, the main thrust of biological research has shifted increasingly from peripheral measures of autonomic and neurochemical parameters to the use of neuroimaging techniques to directly identify reactivity and neurochemistry of live brain in anxiety disorders. This research on neuronal circuits is generally developed around models of anxiety and fears that were proposed earlier by basic scientists (
21,
22). A synthesis of current data has been attempted for panic (
23) and OCD (
24), although the puzzle has not been completed.
Anxiety disorders are an especially appropriate target for neuroimaging research, because a specific symptom provocation can often be employed. Excellent reviews of neuroimaging experiments in anxiety have been published (
25,
26), although to date the data remain limited. As discussed earlier, every anxiety disorder may be viewed as an interplay of initial anxiety, abnormal information processing, and inadequate coping strategies. In the contemporary model of anxiety, specific neuronal circuits are responsible for alarm reactions, processing of threat information, and behavioral coping (Table 4). Alarm circuits include the amygdala, periaqueductal gray matter, and the hippocampus area. A disturbance of these circuits produces a lower threshold for alarm reactions such as spontaneous panic attacks. These circuits may be responsible for a quick-learning response to a threat. Information processing circuits are probably closely associated with the cingulum and cortico-striatal systems, which are typically affected in OCD. Abnormalities in coping are very likely governed by large cortical networks and hence will be difficult to tease apart. The above-mentioned models attempt to simplify very complex brain circuitry that will probably be extensively studied over the next several decades before a solid understanding emerges of how the brain processes and deals with threat.
The postulated circuits are governed by multiple neurotransmitter systems, with gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate the most prominent among them. Three major neurotransmitter systems—serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine—have been extensively studied in normal and pathological anxiety states. The significance of these systems is clear from the fact that most of the effective treatments of anxiety affect one or several of the systems. It is clear, however, that anxiety disorders are not a result of a simple deficiency of one of the neurotransmitters. The accumulated body of research shows that the networks governed by these transmitters have extensive interrelationships, multiple feedback mechanisms, and complex receptor structures. This complexity can explain the unpredictable and sometimes paradoxical responses to medication. A new avenue of research involving other, more specific neurotransmitter systems has been fruitful in elucidating their function in anxiety but thus far has not produced any new treatments.