Culture-specific symptoms may be seen in a panic attack but should not count as one of
the required symptoms to diagnose a panic disorder. Which of the following is considered
a cultural specific symptom?
a) Sensations of being smothered
b) Headaches
c) Heart palpitations
d) Going crazy
All of the following disorders are included in the anxiety disorders chapter in the DSM-5
except:
e) Specific phobia
f) Separation anxiety disorder
g) Agoraphobia
h) Stereotypic movement disorder
Zoe Hunter is a twenty-four old woman who is in her last year of graduate studies. Ever
since she began school four years ago, she noticed that she has become more and more
agitated about seemingly endless lists of things. Zoe spends most of her day worrying
whether she will do well enough in her courses to maintain her student loans. She
worries whether the other students like her, if she is pursuing the right career, if she can
get her papers done on time, if her teachers will be available to talk with her after class, if
she can find her favorite seat in class, if her roommate will pay for her share of the rent, if
her car will be reliable, if the library will have the book she needs, if she can get home for
the holidays, and how her parents are managing back home. Zoe replays these and other
situations in her mind all day long and then continues to fret about them when she tries to
fall asleep. She is preoccupied with these worries so much so that she has difficulty
falling asleep, finds it hard to concentrate, and constantly feels on edge. Zoe tells the
social worker in the school's counseling center, I just can't seem to stop worrying.
Everybody calls me such a 'worry wart'. Her most likely diagnosis would be:
a) Social anxiety disorder (social phobia)
b) Panic disorder
c) Generalized anxiety disorder
d) Unspecified anxiety disorder