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Functional Abdominal Pain in Childhood and Long-term Vulnerability to Anxiety Disorders

Authors :
Kezia C Shirkey
Angela R. Shears
Kirsten L. Haman
Grace D. Shelby
Judy Garber
Craig A. Smith
Amanda L. Sherman
Sara N. Horst
Joy E. Beck
Lynn S. Walker
Source :
Pediatrics. 132:475-482
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2013.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cross-sectional studies link functional abdominal pain (FAP) to anxiety and depression in childhood, but no prospective study has evaluated psychiatric status in adulthood or its relation to pain persistence. METHODS: Pediatric patients with FAP (n = 332) and control subjects (n = 147) were tracked prospectively and evaluated for psychiatric disorders and functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) at follow-up in adolescence and young adulthood (mean age = 20.01 years). Participants were classified according to presence (FGID-POS) or absence (FGID-NEG) of FGIDs at follow-up. RESULTS: Lifetime and current risk of anxiety disorders was higher in FAP than controls (lifetime: 51% vs 20%; current: 30% vs 12%). Controlling for gender and age, the odds ratio was 4.9 (confidence interval = 2.83–7.43) for lifetime anxiety disorder and 3.57 (confidence interval = 2.00–6.36) for current anxiety disorder at follow-up for FAP versus controls. Lifetime risk of depressive disorder was significantly higher in FAP versus controls (40% vs. 16%); current risk did not differ. In most cases, initial onset of anxiety disorders was before pediatric FAP evaluation; onset of depressive disorders was subsequent to FAP evaluation. Within the FAP group, risk of current anxiety disorders at follow-up was significantly higher for FGID-POS versus FGID-NEG (40% vs 24%), and both were higher than controls (12%); current depressive disorders did not differ across FGID-POS, FGID-NEG, and controls. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with FAP carry long-term vulnerability to anxiety that begins in childhood and persists into late adolescence and early adulthood, even if abdominal pain resolves.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
132
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a68e767739f2f96d2cf24d0eeaa60783