Epidemiology of panic disorder panic disorder
The conceptualization of panic disorder can be traced back to the concept of irritable heart syndrome, which was noticed in soldiers during the American Civil War by Jacob Mendes DaCosta . The
DaCosta syndrome include many of the devas psychic and somatic symptoms that are now in-cluded in the diagnostic criteria for panic disorder.
In 1895, Sigmund Freud introduced the concept of anxiety neurosis , which consisted of acute symptoms and chronic psychological and somatic. The
acute anxiety neurosis Freud was similar to the disorder of the DSM-IV nico pa.
Freud was the first to notice the relationship between panic attacks and agoraphobia. The term
"agoraphobia" was coined in 1871 for the condition in which patients seem to be afraid to venture out in public without being accompanied by friends or relatives.
The word from the shore from the greek agora and phobos, meaning fear of the streets.
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