Psychiatry Research
Volume 134, Issue 1 , Pages 85-91, 30 March 2005

Marked depression and anxiety in patients with functional dysphonia

  • Ulrike Willinger

      Affiliations

    • Department of Phoniatrics and Logopedics, University–Ear, Nose, and Throat–Clinic, Währinger Gürtel 18-20, A-1090 Vienna, Austria
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +43 1 40400 3335; fax: +43 1 40400 3332.
  • ,
  • Sabine Völkl-Kernstock

      Affiliations

    • University Clinic for Neuropsychiatry of Children and Adolescents, Vienna, Austria
  • ,
  • Harald Nikolaus Aschauer

      Affiliations

    • Department of General Psychiatry, University Hospital for Psychiatry, Vienna, Austria

Received 27 May 2002; received in revised form 4 June 2003; accepted 16 July 2003.

Abstract 

The etiology of functional dysphonia is still unclear, but psychological factors are assumed to play an important role [Wilson, J.A., Deary, I.J., Scott, S., Mackenzie, K., 1995. Functional dysphonia. British Medical Journal 311, 1039–1040]. The purpose of this report is to investigate the impact of depression and anxiety in functional dysphonia. Sixty-one patients with functional dysphonia were screened for additional psychiatric disorders (besides 300.11) by a clinical psychiatric interview. They were then compared with healthy controls, matched by age, sex and occupation, with respect to self-reported symptoms of depression, generalized anxiety, and specific anxiety concerning health. The patients had significantly higher scores than the controls in depressive symptoms, in the symptoms of nonspecific and general anxiety, and in the symptoms of specific anxiety concerning health. Fifty-seven percent of the patients also fulfilled DSM-IV criteria for a mood disorder, an anxiety disorder, or an adjustment disorder. Multivariate analysis of covariance, performed to correct for the influence of co-morbid psychiatric diagnoses on self-rated symptoms of depression and anxiety, confirmed significant differences between patients and controls in the symptoms of depression and specific anxiety concerning “somatic complaints.” Both symptoms of depression and anxiety should be taken into consideration in the diagnostic as well as the therapeutic process of patients with functional dysphonia.

Keywords: Conversion disorder, Somatoform disorder, Mood, General and specific anxiety

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PII: S0165-1781(05)00020-X

doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2003.07.007

Psychiatry Research
Volume 134, Issue 1 , Pages 85-91, 30 March 2005