01644nas a2200217 4500000000100000008004100001260007600042653001600118653002200134653002700156653001600183653001900199100002600218700002400244245009900268300001000367490000700377520101400384022001401398020001401412 2012 d c01/2012bSociedad Española para el Estudio de la Ansiedad y el Estrés10aAgoraphobia10aclinical symptoms10aEmotional intelligence10aoutpatients10apanic disorder1 aNathalie P. Lizeretti1 aAna Rodríguez Ruiz00aPerceived emotional intelligence in outpatients diagnosed with panic disorder with agoraphobia a43-530 v183 aOf all anxiety disorders, panic disorder with agoraphobia is the most disabling one, and it has been associated with difficulties in emotional processing. Emotional Intelligence (El), which covers a set of abilities to perceive, use, understand and manage emotions, can be useful for studying these difficulties. The aim of this descriptive study was to investigate the relationship between EI and clinical symptoms of agoraphobia in a sample of 99 outpatients diagnosed with panic disorder with agoraphobia and 101 healthy controls who were assessed with the TMMS-24, SCL-R-90 and Agoraphobia Inventory. Scores in Emotional Attention and Regulation showed a difference between both groups. In addition, correlations between Emotional Repair, on one hand, and anxiety symptoms (r = -.4l4, p=,000) and agoraphobia (r = -.363, p=.006) on the other, suggest that a perceived low emotional self-efficacy could constitute a vulnerability factor in the development or maintenance of panic disorder with agoraphobia. a1134-7937 a2174-0437