Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Anxiety and its disorders in children and adolescents before the twentieth century
- 2 Affective and cognitive processes and the development and maintenance of anxiety and its disorders
- 3 Behavioural inhibition and the development of childhood anxiety disorders
- 4 Psychosocial developmental theory in relation to anxiety and its disorders
- 5 Neuropsychiatry of paediatric anxiety disorders
- 6 Clinical phenomenology, classification and assessment of anxiety disorders in children and adolescents
- 7 Friends or foes? Peer influences on anxiety among children and adolescents
- 8 Conditioning models of childhood anxiety
- 9 Traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder
- 10 Family and genetic influences: is anxiety ‘all in the family’?
- 11 Child–parent relations: attachment and anxiety disorders
- 12 Community and epidemiological aspects of anxiety disorders in children
- 13 Onset, course, and outcome for anxiety disorders in children
- 14 Psychosocial interventions for anxiety disorders in children: status and future directions
- 15 Pharmacological treatment of paediatric anxiety
- 16 Prevention of anxiety disorders: the case of post-traumatic stress disorder
- Index
5 - Neuropsychiatry of paediatric anxiety disorders
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Anxiety and its disorders in children and adolescents before the twentieth century
- 2 Affective and cognitive processes and the development and maintenance of anxiety and its disorders
- 3 Behavioural inhibition and the development of childhood anxiety disorders
- 4 Psychosocial developmental theory in relation to anxiety and its disorders
- 5 Neuropsychiatry of paediatric anxiety disorders
- 6 Clinical phenomenology, classification and assessment of anxiety disorders in children and adolescents
- 7 Friends or foes? Peer influences on anxiety among children and adolescents
- 8 Conditioning models of childhood anxiety
- 9 Traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder
- 10 Family and genetic influences: is anxiety ‘all in the family’?
- 11 Child–parent relations: attachment and anxiety disorders
- 12 Community and epidemiological aspects of anxiety disorders in children
- 13 Onset, course, and outcome for anxiety disorders in children
- 14 Psychosocial interventions for anxiety disorders in children: status and future directions
- 15 Pharmacological treatment of paediatric anxiety
- 16 Prevention of anxiety disorders: the case of post-traumatic stress disorder
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Progress in the neurobiology of childhood anxiety has recently focused on the effects of rearing and environment in the progression of anxiety states. Convergence of evidence from both child studies of stress and trauma (Pfefferbaum, 1997; Pynoos, Steinberg & Wrath, 1995) as well as primate rearing and deprivation studies (Coplan et al., 1996; Higley, Suomi & Linnoila, 1992) illustrate that the effects of stress in the genesis of anxiety disorder can be profound. Anxiety disorders are now viewed from a developmental perspective (Ollendick, 1998; Rosenberg & Keshavan, 1998) in which an individual's history of exposure to threat and that threat's developmental and cognitive context are interwoven with internal factors (e.g. genetic and neurophysiological) as keys to the individual's ‘stress-response system’. Later in this chapter, neuroanatomical and information processing models of panic and childhood obsessive–compulsive disorders (OCD) are discussed in their developmental context in order to shed light on both the development of anxiety disorder and its frequent association with comorbid conditions, such as attention-deficit hyper-activity disorder (ADHD), in child psychiatry. The implication is clear: anxiety disorders, now viewed across the life span (Ballenger, 1997; Lydiard & Brawman-Mintzer, 1997), require treatments that reflect both the developmental stage and context of anxiety disorder genesis and maintenance.
Our understanding of the neurobiology of anxiety has been propelled by new pharmacological therapeutic tools specific in their impact on certain central nervous system (CNS) receptors within the ‘stress-response system’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Anxiety Disorders in Children and AdolescentsResearch, Assessment and Intervention, pp. 90 - 125Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
- 1
- Cited by