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Interactions between psychotherapy and drug therapy in generalized anxiety disorder

โœ Scribed by Elie G. Hantouche; Vihang N. Vahia


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
96 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6222

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โœฆ Synopsis


Given the availability of a wide range of proven pharmacological treatments for anxiety disorders and also the range of eective psychological interventions, the debate over drug therapy versus non-drug therapy, e.g. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), has evolved into an appreciation of the importance of combining both approaches. The clinical trials of combination therapy in Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) are still rare in comparison to those in Panic Disorder and OCD. A critical review of the few combination therapy studies in GAD revealed methodological limitations and variations in diagnostic criteria and in treatmentยฑtherapy combinations which gave inconsistent results, so rendering speciยฎc conclusions impossible, except that combination therapy may be of particular usefulness in severe cases of GAD. In general practice, not all patients require combination therapy and various criteria need to be addressed, e.g. What are the clinical indications, safety and ecacy of combined strategies? How does one adapt one treatment strategy to increase the ecacy of the other? Clinical ยฎndings have suggested that in particular anxiety states, drug therapy (especially the benzodiazepines) may inhibit the long term gains from psychotherapy. In order to show the dierential long term eects of two anxiolytics (hydroxyzine and alprazolam) on ongoing psychosocial therapy in GAD, a controlled double-blind study was conducted concurrently in Mumbai and Paris.


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