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Specific
Phobia
DSM IV Diagnostic Criteria
Marked and persistent fear that is
excessive or unreasonable that is caused by the presence or anticipation of a specific
object or situation.
Exposure to the feared stimulus
provokes an immediate anxiety response which may take the form of a
Recognition by the patient that the
fear is excessive or unreasonable.
The phobic situation is avoided or
endured with intense anxiety.
The avoidance, anxious anticipation,
or distress in the feared situations interferes with functioning or produces marked phobea
In individuals under age 18, the
duration must be at least
Symptoms are not caused by another
mental disorder (e.g., fear of dirt in someone with OCD).
Specify Type of Phobias
- Animal (e.g., dogs)
- Natural Environmental (e.g., heights,
storms, water)
- Blood-Injection-Injury
- Situational (e.g., airplanes,
elevators, enclosed places)
- Other (e.g., situations that may lead
to choking, vomiting)
Clinical Features of Specific
Phobia
- It may result in significant
restriction of life activities or occupation.
- Vasovagal fainting is seen in 75% of
patients with blood-injection-injury phobias.
- Specific phobias often occur along
with other anxiety disorders.
- Fear of animals and other objects is
common in childhood, and it is not diagnosed unless the fear leads to significant
impairment, such as unwillingness to go to school.
- Most childhood phobias are self
limited and do not require treatment. Phobias that continue into
Epidemiology of Specific
Phobia
- Lifetime prevalence of phobias is 10%.
- Most do not cause clinically
significant impairment or distress.
- Age of onset is variable and females
with the disorder far outnumber males with the disorder.
Differential Diagnosis of
Specific Phobia
- Substance Induced Anxiety
disorder: Substances such as caffeine, amphetamines, and cocaine can mimic phobic
symptoms. Alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal can also mimic phobic symptoms. These
disorders should be ruled out with history and toxicology screen.
- Panic Disorder, Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder, Social Phobia, Hypochondriasis or Anorexia Nervosa
Many psychiatric disorders
present with marked anxiety, and the diagnosis of Specific Phobia should be made only if
the anxiety is unrelated to
Treatment