The justification for detaching from neurasthenia a particular syndrome: The anxiety-neurosis 1895-001/1924.en
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    V

    THE JUSTIFICATION FOR DETACHING
    FROM NEURASTHENIA A PARTICULAR
    SYNDROME: THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS!

    (1894)

    t is difficult to say anything of general validity

    concerning neurasthenia so long as we allow this

    name to cover all that Beard included under the
    term. In my opinion, nothing but gain to neuro-
    pathology can result if we make an attempt to dis-
    tinguish from neurasthenia proper all those neurotic
    disturbances of which the symptoms, on the one
    hand, are more closely related to one another than
    to the typical symptoms of neurasthenia (headache,
    spinal irritation, and dyspepsia with flatulence and
    constipation) and, on the other hand, show in their
    ztiology and their mechanism essential differences
    from typical neurasthenia. If we accept this plan
    we shall soon obtain a more or less uniform picture
    of neurasthenia; and shall then be in a position to
    differentiate more sharply than had hitherto been
    possible between neurasthenia proper and various
    kinds of pseudo-neurasthenia, such as the clinical
    picture of the organically determined nasal reflex
    neurosis, the nervous disorders of the cachexias and
    arterio-sclerosis, the early stages of general paralysis
    of the insance and of the psychoses. Further, it will
    be possible—as Möbius proposed—to eliminate many
    of the nervous conditions of the hereditarily degen-

    ! First published in the Neurologisches Zentralblat Nr. 2
    [Translated’ by John Rickman) > Zentralblait, 1805, N. 2

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 77

    erate; and we shall also find good reason to include
    under melancholia many neuroses (especially inter-
    mittent and periodic types) which are to-day called
    neurasthenia. But the most decisive change of all
    will be introduced if we decide to distinguish from
    neurasthenia the syndrome I here propose to describe,
    which fulfils with unusual completeness the con-
    ditions set forth above. The symptoms of this syn-
    drome are clinically much more closely related to one
    another than to those of neurasthenia proper (that
    is, they frequently appear together and replace each
    other during the course of the illness), while the
    xtiology and mechanism of this neurosis are essen-
    tially different from what remains of true neurasthenia
    after this subtraction has been made from it.

    I call this syndrome ‘“Anxiety-Neurosis’, because
    all its component elements can be grouped round
    the central symptom of ‘morbid anxiety’ and be-
    cause individually they each have a definite connec-
    tion with this. I believed that this conception of
    the symptoms of the anxiety-neurosis had originat-
    ed with myself until an interesting paper by
    E. Hecker! came into my hands, in which I found
    the same idea expounded with the most satisfying
    clearness and completeness. Although Hecker re-
    cognizes certain symptoms as equivalents or in-
    complete manifestations of an anxiety-attack, he
    does not separate them from neurasthenia as I
    propose to do; this is evidently due to his not having
    taken into account the difference in the ztiological
    conditions of the two forms of disease. When this
    last difference between them is fully recognized, we

    % E, Hecker; Über larvierte und abortive Angstzustände bei
    Neurasthenie. Zentralblatt für Nervenheilkunde, Dec. 1893. Morbid
    anxiety is actually quoted as one of the principal symptoms of neur-

    asthenia in a paper by Kaan: Der neurasthenische Angstaffekt bei
    Zwangsvorstellungen und der primordiale Grübelzwang. Wien, 1893.

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    75 COLLECTED PAPERS Yv

    have no longer any motive for designating anxiety
    symptoms by the same term as those of neurasthenia
    proper; for the purpose served by giving a name,
    however arbitrary it may be in other respects, is
    above all that of enabling us more easily to form
    generalizations.

    I. CLINICAL SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF ANXIETY-NEUROSIS

    What I call ‘anxiety-neurosis’ manifests itself in
    a partial and in a complete form, and may be met
    with either as an isolated state or combined with
    other neuroses. The cases which are more or less
    complete and at the same time isolated are naturally
    those which in particular give support to the idea
    that anxiety-neurosis is a clinical entity. In other
    cases where there is a complex of symptoms corres-
    ponding to a mixed neurosis, we have to distinguish
    and separate from it those symptoms which belong
    neither to neurasthenia nor to hysteria and so on,
    but to anxiety-neurosis.

    The clinical picture of anxiety-neurosis comprises
    the following symptoms:

    I. General irritability. This is a common nervous
    symptom and as such belongs to many nervous
    conditions. I include it here because it invariably
    appears with anxiety-neurosis and is important
    theoretically. An increase of irritability always
    signifies an accumulation of excitation or an in-
    ability to tolerate such an accumulation, that is, an
    absolute or a relative accumulation of excitation.
    One form of expression of this increase of irritability
    —auditory hyperssthesia—scems to me worthy of
    special mention; this undue sensitiveness to noise
    is undoubtedly explicable on the basis of the close
    inborn connection between auditory impressions and
    fright. Auditory hyperzsthesia is frequently a cause

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS

    of sleeplessness, more than one form of which be-
    longs to the anxiety-neurosis.

    2. Anxious expectation. 1 cannot better describe
    the condition I have in mind than by this name and
    by appending a few examples. A woman who suffers
    from anxious expectation will imagine every time
    her husband coughs, when he has a cold, that he is
    going to have influenzal pneumonia, and will at once
    see his funeral in her mind’s eye. If when she is
    coming towards the house she sees two people stand-
    ing by her front door, she cannot avoid the thought
    that one of her children has fallen out of the window,
    if the bell rings, then someone is bringing news of
    a death, and so on; whereas on all these occasions
    there is no particular ground for exaggerating a
    mere possibility.

    Anxious expectation of course fades off imper-
    ceptibly into normal anxiousness. It comprises all
    that is covered by the word ‘nervousness’—appre-
    hensiveness, the tendency to look on the dark side
    of things; but at every opportunity it exceeds the
    limits of this plausible form of nervousness and is
    frequently recognized by the patient himself as a
    kind of compulsion. For one form of anxious ex-
    pectation—that relating to one’s own health—we
    may reserve the old term hypochondria. Hypo-
    chondria does not always coincide with a high
    degree of anxious expectation; in general it requires
    as a preliminary condition the presence of par-
    xsthesias and disagreeable bodily sensations, and
    therefore hypochondria is the form favoured by
    true neurasthenics when they fall victims to anxiety-
    neurosis, as they often do.

    The tendency to pangs of conscience, scrupulous-
    ness and pedantry may be a further expression of
    anxious expectation, a tendency which is especially

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    80 COLLECTED PAPERS Yv

    frequent among morally sensitive people and like-
    wise ranges {rom the normal to an exaggeration
    known as folie dw doute.

    Anxious expectation is the nuclear symptom of
    this neurosis; it clearly reveals, too, something of
    the theory of it. We may perhaps say that there is
    here a guantum of amxieiy in a free-floating con-
    dition, which in any state of expectation controls
    the selection of ideas, and is ever ready to attach
    itself to any suitable ideational content.

    3. This is not the only way in which apprehensive-
    ness—which is not usually present in consciousness
    but is ever lying in wait—can express itsclf. It can, on
    the contrary, erupt suddenly into consciousness with-
    out being called forth by any train of thought, and
    thus bring about an anxiety-attack. An anxiety-attack
    of this kind either consists of a feeling of anxiety alone
    without any associated idea, or associated with the
    nearest interpretation, such as sudden death, a stroke,
    or approaching insanity; or else the feeling of
    anxiety is combined with parssthesias (similar to
    the hysterical aura); or finally, together with the
    feeling of anxiety there is an accompanying disturb-
    ance of any one or more of the bodily functions, such
    as respiration, heart’s action, vasomotor innervation,
    or glandular activity. The patient lays stress on one
    or other of these symptoms, and complains of
    “heart-spasms’, ‘difficulty in breathing’, ‘drenching
    sweats’, ‘'ravenous hunger’ and the like; and in his
    description the feeling of anxiety frequently recedes
    into the background or is described quite vaguely
    as a feeling of illness’, of ‘distress’, and so on.

    4. It is interesting, and important diagnostically,
    that the degree to which these elements are combined
    in anxiety-attacks varies extraordinarily, and that
    almost every accompanying symptom can alone

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 81

    constitute the attack just as well as the anxiety
    itself can. There are consequently rudimentary
    anxiety-attacks and equivalents of an anxiety-attack (all
    probably having the same meaning), showing a
    manifold and hitherto little appreciated variety of
    forms. A closer study of these larval anxiety-states
    (Hecker) and their diagnostic differentiation from
    other attacks should soon become a necessary piece
    of work in neuropathology.

    I will here append a list including only those types
    of anxiety-attack known to me:

    a. Attacks accompanied by disturbances of the
    heart's action, such as palpitation, either with trans-
    itory arhythmia, or with tachycardia of longer
    duration that may end in grave weakness of the
    heart, the differentiation from organic morbus cordis
    never being easy; or pseudo-angina pectoris—dia-
    gnostically a delicate problem!

    b. Attacks accompanied by disturbances of res-
    piration, several forms of nervous dyspnoea, attacks
    similar to asthma, and the like. I would emphasize
    that even these attacks are not always accompanied
    by recognizable anxiety.

    ce. Attacks of sweating, often nocturnal.

    d. Attacks of tremor and shuddering, which are
    only too easily confounded with hysteria.

    e. Attacks of ravenous hunger, often accompanied
    by giddiness.

    f. Attacks of sudden diarrhea.

    g. Attacks of locomotor vertigo.

    h. Attacks of so-called congestion, practically em-
    bracing all that has been called vasomotor neur-
    asthenia.

    i. Attacks of paresthesias (but these seldom occur

    without anxiety or some similar feeling of distress).
    6

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    5. Awakening in fright (the bavor nocturnus of
    adults), which is usually combined with morbid
    anxiety, dyspnoa, sweating and the like, is very
    frequently nothing but a variety of the anxiety
    attack. This disturbance conditions a second type
    of sleeplessness which also lies within the compass
    of anxiety-neurosis—I have no doubt in my own
    mind that the Davor nocturnus of children also in-
    cludes a type which belongs to anxiety-neurosis.
    The hysterical tinge, i. e. the coupling of morbid
    anxiety with the reproduction of some appropriate
    experience of dream, gives the davor nocturnus of
    children the appearance of being something distinct;
    but it also appears in a pure form without dream or
    recurring hallucination.

    6. Vertigo takes a prominent place in the group
    of symptoms of the anxiety-neurosis. Its mildest
    form is better described as giddiness; and its graver
    manifestations, ‘attacks of vertigo’ (with or without
    anxiety), constitute one of the most momentous
    symptoms of this disease. The dizziness of the
    anxiety-neurosis is neither rotatory nor is it confined
    to particular planes or directions as is Meniere’s
    vertigo. It belongs to the class of locomotor or co-
    ordinatory dizziness, as do the cases of oculo-motor
    paralysis; it consists of a specific discomfort accom-
    panied by the feeling that the ground is rocking, the
    legs giving way, that one can’t keep upright be-
    cause one’s legs are as heavy as lead and are shaking
    and wobbling. This dizziness never leads to a fall.
    I venture, however, to assert that a profound fainting
    fit may supervene in the place of an attack of vertigo
    of this kind. Other swoon-like conditions in anxiety-
    neurosis appear to result from cardiac collapse.

    An attack of vertigo is not seldom accompanied
    by the worst kind of morbid anxiety, and is fre-

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 83

    quentiy attended by cardiac and respiratory disturb-
    ances. According to my observations the vertigo
    produced by heights, mountains and precipices also
    frequently belongs to the anxiety-neurosis; further,
    I do not know whether one would not be justified
    in recognizing alongside this the existence of a vertigo
    of gastric origin.

    7. On the basis of chronic apprehensiveness (anxious
    expectation) on the one hand, and a tendency
    to attacks of vertigo with anxiety on the other, two
    groups of typical phobias develop, the first relating
    to common physiological dangers, the other to loco-
    motion. To the first group belongs the fear of snakes,
    thunderstorms, darkness, vermin, and so on, as well
    as the typical moral over-sensitiveness, and the
    forms of ‘“folie du doute’ ; the available anxiety is here
    used simply to exaggerate the aversions which are
    implanted instinctively in everyone. Usually, how-
    ever, a phobia with obsessive strength arises only
    when, added to such an instinctive aversion, a
    reminiscence of an experience in which the anxiety
    could come to expression supervenes—for example,
    after the patient has actually experienced a thunder-
    storm in the open air. To attempt to explain such
    cases as mere continuations of strong impressions
    would be incorrect; what makes these experiences
    significant and their retention in memory of long
    duration is indeed simply the anxiety, which both
    originally and subsequently thus found a means of
    expression. In other words, such impressions remain
    potent only in cases where ‘anxious expectation’
    is present.

    The other group includes agoraphobia with all its
    accessory forms, collectively characterized by their
    relation to movement. We frequently find a pre-
    cursory attack of vertigo as the foundation of the
    u

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    84 COLLECTED PAPERS NV

    phobia; but I do not believe that one can postulate
    this every time. Occasionally we see that after a
    first attack of giddiness without anxiety locomotion
    still continues possible without hindrance, although
    henceforth constantly accompanied by the sensation
    of giddiness; but that under certain conditions, such
    as being alone, in narrow streets and so on, loco-
    motion becomes impossible when once anxiety has
    become combined with an attack of vertigo.

    The relation of these phobias to those of the
    obsessional neurosis, the mechanisms of which I
    have discussed in an earlier paper! in this Journal,
    is of the following kind: the correspondence between
    them is that in both an idea becomes obsessive in
    consequence of its being connected with an un-
    attached affect. The mechanism of transposition of
    affect holds good therefore for both kinds of phobia;
    but in the phobias of the anxiety-neurosis (1) this
    affect is always the same, always that of anxiety;
    (2) it does not originate in a repressed idea, proves
    not reducible further by psychological analysis, and
    is also not amenable to psychotherapy. The mechan-
    ism of substitution does not therefore hold good for
    the phobias of the anxiety-neurosis.

    Both kinds of phobias (or obsessional idcas) fre-
    quently appear side by side, although the atypical
    phobias which are based on obsessional ideas nced
    not necessarily develop on the basis of an anxiety-
    neurosis. A very frequent, apparently complicated
    mechanism makes its appearance when the content
    of an originally simple phobia of the anxiety-neurosis
    type is replaced by another idea, the substitution
    being then subsequently added to the phobia. The
    protective measures’ originally directed towards
    combating the phobia are the ideas most frequently

    1 See No. IV of this volume, above, p. 50.

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 85
    employed as substitutions. Thus, for example, ‘brood-
    ing mania’ arises from the patient’s effort to dis-
    prove that he is crazy, as his hypochondriacal phobia
    maintains: the hesitations and doubts, and still more
    the repetitions, of folie du doute, arise from a justi-
    fiable doubt about his own powers of correct reason-
    ing, since he is aware of the persistent disturbance
    of the obsessional idea; and so on. We can there-
    fore assert that many syndromes of the obsessional
    neurosis, such as folie ds doute and the like, are also
    clinically, though not conceptually, to be reckoned
    as belonging to the anxiety-neurosis.!

    8. Digestive processes are subject to only a few
    disturbances in anxiety-neurosis, but these are char-
    acteristic. Sensations such as nausea and biliousness
    are not at all rare, and the symptom of ravenous
    hunger can, by itself or in combination with others
    (congestions), constitute a rudimentary anxiety-
    attack; as a chronic condition analogous to anxious
    expectation we find a tendency to diarrhoa which
    has given rise to the queerest diagnostic mistakes.
    If I am not mistaken, it is this diarrh@a to which
    Möbius® has recently called attention in a short
    paper. I conjecture further that Peyer’s reflex
    diarrhoea, which he derives from the disorders of
    the prostate,® is nothing but this diarrhaa of anx-
    iety-neurosis. The deception of a-reflex relationship
    comes about because the same factors which are
    active in the origin of such prostatic affections also
    come into play in the zetiology of anxiety-neurosis.

    The behaviour of the gastro-intestinal tract in
    anxiety-neurosis presents a sharp contrast to tlıe
    influence of neurasthenia on those functions. Mixed

    ’ Sec No. VII of this volume, p. 128.

    = Möbius: Neuropathologische Beiträge, Heft 2, 1894.

    ® Peyer: Die nervösen Affektionen des Darmes. Wiener Klinik,
    January, 1893.

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    86 COLLECTED PAPERS v

    cases often show the well-known ‘alternation of
    diarrhea and constipation’. The urgent need to
    micturate that occurs in the anxiety-neurosis is
    analogous to this diarrhoea.

    9. The parasthesias which may accompany attacks
    of vertigo or anxiety are interesting in that they
    (as also the sensations of the hysterical aura) be-
    come associated in a definite sequence; but I find
    that, in contrast to those of hysteria, these asso-
    ciated sensations are atypical and changing. A further
    similarity to hysteria ensues because a kind of
    conversion‘, which may otherwise easily be over-
    looked, to bodily sensations takes place in anxiety-
    neurosis, e. g. a conversion which takes effect in
    rheumatic muscles. Quite a number of rheumatic
    persons, so-called, who moreover are demonstrable as
    such, in reality suffer from anxiety-neurosis. Along
    with this increased sensitiveness to pain I have obser-
    ved in a series of cases of anxiety-neurosis a tendency
    to hallucinations which could not be explained as
    hysterical.

    Io. Several of the symptoms mentioned which
    accompany or take the place of an anxiety-attack
    appear also in a chronic form. They are then still
    less easy to recognize, since the accompanying
    anxious sensation is less clearly recognizable than in
    anxiety-attacks. This is particularly true of diar-
    rhoea, vertigo, parzsthesias. Just as an attack of
    vertigo may be replaced by a fainting-fit, so may
    chronic giddiness be replaced by a constant feeling
    of sinking to the ground, exhaustion, etc.

    1. THEINCIDENCE AND ETIOLOGYOFANXIETY-NEUROSIS

    In many cases of anxiety-neurosis no ztiology is
    recognizable at all. It is remarkable that in such

    * See No. IV of this volume, above, p. 50.

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 87

    cases evidence of a grave hereditary taint is seldom
    diffieult to establish.

    But where there are grounds for regarding the
    neurosis as an acquired one, careful enquiry to that
    end reveals a series of injurious conditions (noxie)
    and influences within the sexual life as important
    factors in the ztiology. At first sight these appear
    to be very various in their nature but they soon
    disclose their common character, which explains the
    fact that they always have the same effect on the
    nervous system; further, they are either present
    alone or together with other ‘ordinary’ injurious
    factors, which latter may be regarded as having a
    contributory effect. As this sexual ztiology of the
    anxiety-neurosis is so very commonly demonstrable
    I feel justified for the purpose of this short paper in
    disregarding cases with a doubtful or a different
    ztiology.

    In setting forth in greater detail the ztiological
    conditions under which anxiety-neurosis makes its
    appearance it will be advisable to treat of men and
    women separately. Anxiety-neurosis appears in
    female persons—disregarding for the moment their
    predisposition—in the following cases:

    a. as virginal anxiety or anxiety in adolescents.
    A number of unambiguous observations has shown
    me that anxiety-neurosis can be evoked in maturing
    girls by their first meeting with the sexual problem,
    that is, by any more or less sudden revelation of
    what had hitherto been hidden, for example, seeing
    the sexual act, or hearing or reading something of
    that nature; in these cases anxiety-neurosis is typic-
    ally combined with hysteria;

    b. as anxiety in the newly-married. Young married
    women who remain ansthetic during the first acts
    of intercourse often fall ill of an anxiety-neurosis

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    which again disappears as soon as the anzsthesia
    gives way to normal sensitivity. Since the majority
    of young women remain healthy during a temporary
    anzsthesia of this kind, there are conditions neces-
    sary to the outbreak of this anxiety, which I will
    mention later;

    c. as anxiety in women whose husbands suffer
    from ejaculatio pracox or from impaired potency ; and

    d. whose husbands practise coitus interruptus or
    reservatus. These cases belong together, for on
    analysing a large number of examples it is easy to
    convince oneself that they depend simply on whether
    the wife obtains satisfaction in coitus or not. The
    latter case provides the condition for the genesis of
    an anxiety-neurosis. On the other hand, the wife is
    saved from neurosis if the husband who is afflicted
    with ejaculatio pracox can immediately repeat the
    congress with a better result. Congressus reservatus
    by means of condoms is not injurious to the wife if
    she is very quickly roused and the husband very
    potent; if not, this kind of contraception is no less
    injurious than the others. Coitus interruptus is almost
    always harmful; though only for the wife when the
    husband practises it regardlessiy, that is to say,
    when he interrupts coitus as soon as he is near to
    ejaculation without troubling himself about the stage
    of his wife’s excitement. If on the other hand the
    husband waits for his wife’s satisfaction then the
    coitus will be equivalent to the normal for her—but
    the husband will become a sufferer from anxiety-
    neurosis. I have collected and analysed a great
    number of observations which have provided the
    material for these conclusions;

    e. as anxiely in widows and voluntarıly abstinent

    bersons, often found in typical combination with
    obsessional ideas;

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 89

    f. as anxiety in the climacterie during the last
    great increase of sexual need.

    Cases c., d., and e. embrace the conditions un-
    der which anxiety-neurosis in the female sex most fre-
    quently arises and is least dependent on hereditary
    predisposition. On the basis of these cases of anxiety-
    neurosis—curable, acquired cases—I shall try to
    prove that the injurious sexual condition (noxia)
    discovered in them really represents the »tiological
    factor of this neurosis. Before doing so, however,
    I will go on to discuss the sexual conditions for
    anxiety-neurosis in men. I propose to set up the
    following groups, which all have their analogies
    among women:

    a. anxiety of the voluntarily abstinent, frequently
    combined with defence symptoms (obsessional ideas,
    hysteria). The motives which are decisive for inten-
    tional abstinence bring it about that a number of
    hereditarily-disposed or eccentrie persons, etc. belong
    to this category;

    b. anxiety in men during frustrated excitement
    (during an engagement to marry), in persons who
    (from fear of the consequences of sexual intercourse)
    content themselves with handling or gazing at the
    woman. This group of conditions (which by the
    way applies equally to the other sex: engagement,
    relationships involving sexual forbearance) furnishes
    the purest cases of the neurosis;

    c. anxiety in men who practise coitus interruptus.
    As has been said already, coitus interruptus is
    harmful to the woman when it is practised without
    regard to her satisfaction; but it becomes harmful to
    the man if, in order to provide satisfaction for the
    woman, he voluntarily controls coitus and delays
    the ejaculation. It thus becomes intelligible that as
    a rule only one partner of a married couple practis-

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    90 COLLECTED PAPERS v

    ing coitus interruptus falls ill. Incidentally, coitus
    interruptus but rarely leads to a pure anxiety-neur-
    osis in men; there usually results a combination of
    it with neurasthenia;

    d. anxiety in ageing men. There are men who
    have a climacteric like women and who develop
    anxiety- neurosis at the time of their waning potency
    and increased libido.

    Finally I must add two other cases which are
    valid for both sexes:

    e. The neurasthenics who after practising masturb-
    ation fall victims to anxiety-neurosis as soon as
    they desist from their form of sexual gratification.
    These persons have rendered themselves particularly
    incapable of tolerating abstinence.

    I observe here that in order to understand the
    anxiety-neurosis it is important to realize that any
    pronounced manifestation of it occurs only among
    men who are still potent and among women who
    are not anzssthetic. Among neurasthenics whose
    potency has already been seriously diminished by
    masturbation, the anxiety-neurosis resulting from
    abstinence is of a very meagre character and con-
    fines itself as a rule to hypochondria and mild chronic
    dizziness. The majority of women are to be regarded
    as ‘potent’; a really impotent, i. e. really anzsthetic,
    woman is likewise only mildly affected by anxicty-
    neurosis and tolerates the injurious sexual conditions
    described surprisingly well.

    How far beyond this we may be justified in post-
    ulating a constant relation between particular &tio-
    logical factors and particular symptoms in the
    complex of anxiety-neurosis, I do not yet wish to
    express any opinion.

    7. The last of the ztiological conditions I have to
    bring forward appears at first sieht not to be of a

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS gI

    sexual nature at all. Anxiety-neurosis also arises
    (in both sexes) as a result of the factor of over-work
    or exhausting exertion, for example, nights of watch-
    ing, sick-nursing, or even after severe illness.

    The principal objection to my proposition of a
    sexual ztiology for the anxiety-neurosis will prob-
    ably run as follows: abnormal conditions in the
    scxual life of the kind mentioned are found so very
    frequently that they must be forthcoming wherever
    one looks for them. Their presence in the cases of
    anxiety-neurosis quoted does not therefore prove
    that the tiology of this neurosis is to be found in
    them. The number of people, moreover, who practise
    coitus interruptus, etc., is incomparably greater than
    the number of those afflicted with anxiety-neurosis
    and the great majority of the former tolerate this
    unhealthy condition quite well.

    To this I have to reply that we should certainly
    not be right in expecting to find in the neuroses an
    setiological factor of rare occurrence, seeing how very
    great their frequency admittedly is, especially that
    of anxiety-neurosis; also that it actually fulfils a
    postulate of pathology ifin an ztiological enquiry the
    zetiological factor is proved to be more frequent than
    its effect, since for the latter other conditions are
    also required (disposition, summation of specific
    xtiological factors, reinforcement by other ‘ordinary’
    injurious factors); and further, that detailed ex-
    ploration of suitable cases of anxiety-neurosis proves
    beyond question the importance of the sexual factor.
    I will here confine myself to the ztiological factor
    of coitus interruptus only and to adducing certain
    observations which confirm it.

    1. So long as an anxiety-neurosis in young married
    women is not yet established, but only appears

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    92 COLLECTED PAPERS V

    sporadically and disappears again spontaneously,
    it is possible to demonstrate that every such wave
    of the neurosis is traceable to a coitus lacking in
    satisfaction. Two days after this experience, or in
    persons of little resistance, on the next day, an attack
    of anxiety or vertigo regularly appears, bringing in
    its train the other symptoms of the neurosis, which
    all again disappear together with the attack if
    marital relations occur sufficiently seldom. A chance
    absence from home on the part of the husband, or
    a holiday in the mountains necessitating the separa-
    tion of the couple, have a good effect; the gynaco-
    logical treatment that is usually resorted to in
    the first instance is beneficial because marital rela-
    tions are broken off while it lasts. Strange to say,
    however, the success of local treatment is but trans-
    itory—and even in the mountains the neurosis re-
    appears as soon as the husband in his turn arrives;
    and so forth. When a physician who understands
    this »tiology advises a patient in whom the neurosis
    is not yet established to substitute normal relations
    for coitus interruptus a therapeutic test of the state-
    ments made here is supplied. The anxiety is removed
    and does not return again without a fresh cause of
    a similar nature.

    2. In the history of many cases of anxiety-ncurosis
    both among men and women we find a striking
    fluctuation in the intensity of the clinical symptoms,
    and even in the appearance and disappearance of tlıe
    whole condition. One year, they will say, was
    pretty good, the next was frightful; on one occasion
    the improvement coincided with a certain treatment
    which however on the next attack turned out quite
    useless; and so on. Now if we enquire into the number
    and sequence of the children and compare this
    record with the history of the neurosis a simple

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 93

    solution results—-the periods of improvement and
    well-being coincide with the wife’s Pregnancies,
    during which of course the need for contraception
    was no longer present. The treatment that had
    been so beneficial to the man, however, regardless
    of whether it was at Pfarrer Kneipp’s or at a hydro-
    therapeutic sanatorium, was the one after which
    his wife had become pregnant.

    3- From the anamnesis of patients we frequently
    find that the symptoms of anxiety-neurosis have at
    some definite time supplanted the symptoms of
    some other neurosis, for instance, neurasthenia, and
    have taken their place. In such a case it can quite
    regularly be proved that, shortly before the change
    in the clinical picture, a corresponding change had
    taken place from one to another of the various
    kinds of unhealthy sexual conditions possible.

    Observations of this kind can be supplemented to
    any extent at pleasure, positively compelling the
    Physician to acknowledge a sexual ztiology for a
    certain category of cases; other cases, however,
    which would otherwise remain quite unintelligible,
    can at least be understood without difficulty and
    classified by employing the sexual xtiology as a
    key to them. These are those very numerous cases
    in which we find everything that is also present in
    the previous category—the clinical symptoms of
    anxiety-neurosis on the one hand, and the specific
    factor of coitus interruptus on the other—but where
    something else has interposed itself as well, namely,
    a long interval between the xtiology we assume and
    its effect, and perhaps also xtiological factors of a
    non-sexual nature too. Take, for example, a man
    who has a heart-attack after receiving news of his
    father’s death and from that time onwards suffers
    from anxiety-neurosis. The case is not clear, for the

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    94 COLLECTED PAPERS Yv

    man was not nervous before this event; the death
    of the father who was well advanced in years did
    not occur under any special circumstances, and onc
    must admit that the normal, expected decease of an
    aged father is not an experience which usually causes
    illness in a healthy adult. Perhaps the z»tiological
    analysis will be clearer if I add that this man had
    for eleven years practised coitus interruptus and
    always with regard for his wife’s satisfaction. The
    clinical symptoms at least are identical with those
    that appear in other persons after an unhealthy
    condition of the same sexual nature lasting for a
    short period and without the interpolation of another
    trauma. Other cases must be estimated similarly,
    that of a woman in whom anxiety-neurosis broke
    out after the loss of a child, or that of a student
    whose studies preparatory to his qualifying examin-
    ation were interrupted by an anxiety-neurosis. I
    do not find that the effect in these cases is explained
    by the ostensible ztiology. One is not necessarily
    ‘over-worked’ by close study, and a healthy mother
    usually reacts only with normal grief to the loss of
    a child. More particularly, too, I should expect that
    the student would develop cephalasthenia through
    over-work, and the mother in our example hysteria.
    That they both develop an anxiety-neurosis induces
    me to lay emphasis on the fact that the mother had
    lived for eight years in marital coitus interruptus,
    and that the student had for three years had a
    passionate love-relationship with a ‘respectable’ girl
    whom he dared not allow to conceive.

    These considerations lead to the conclusion that
    the specific sexual noxia contained in coitus inter-
    ruptus at least disposes the person concerned to
    acquire it in those cases where it is not in itself
    enough to induce anxiety-neurosis. The neurosis

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 95

    then breaks out as soon as the influence of another
    ordinary injurious factor is added to the latent
    effect of the specific factor; the former can reinforce
    the specific factor quantıtatively but cannot replace it
    qualitatively. The specific factor always remains
    decisive for the form taken by the neurosis. I hope
    to be able to prove this statement in regard to the
    tiology of the neuroses also on a wider scale.

    Some few pages back I mentioned an assumption
    which is not improbable in itself—namely, that a
    noxıa such as coitus interruptus attains its effect by
    summation. According to the disposition of the
    person concerned and the other burdens on his
    nervous system, a longer or shorter time will be
    required before the effect of this summation be-
    comes evident. Those persons who tolerate coitus
    interruptus apparently without harmful results are
    in reality becoming thereby disposed to the disorder
    of anxiety-neurosis, which may break out either at
    any time spontaneously or after an ordinary and
    otherwise insufficient trauma; just as the chronic
    alcoholic will in the end develop a cirrhosis or other
    illness as an effect of summation, or under the in-
    fluence of a fever will go down with a delirium.

    III. ATTEMPTS TO FORMULATE A THEORY OF THE

    ANXIETY-NEUROSIS

    The following considerations can only claim the
    value of a preliminary tentative attempt at a theory;
    critieism of them should not affect the reader’s
    acceptance of the facts set forth above. Moreover,
    this ‘Theory of Anxiety-Neurosis’ represents only a
    fragment of a more comprehensive presentation of
    the neuroses which increases the difficulty of assessing
    its value.

    The material already brought forward in regard
    to the anxiety-neurosis has provided a few openings

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    96 COLLECTED PAPERS

    for some insight into its mechanism. In the first
    place it was surmised that we are here dealing with
    an accumulation of excitation; secondly, there was
    the exceedingly important fact that the anxiety,
    which underlies all the clinical symptoms of this
    neurosis, is not derived from any psychical source.
    A psychical origin would be present, for example,
    if we found as the basis of an anxiety-neurosis a
    single or repeated shock, justified by the circum-
    stances, which had subsequently become the source
    of the readiness to anxiety. But this is not what we
    find; an hysteria or a traumatic neurosis may develop
    as a result of a single shock—an anxiety-neurosis
    never. Since among the causes of anxiety-neurosis
    coitus interruptus forces itself so much into the
    foreground, I thought at first that the source of the
    continual anxiety might lie in the iear, revived
    with every act, that the method might miscarry
    and be followed by conception. But I have found
    that this state of mind either in man or woman during
    coitus interruptus is irrelevant for the genesis of
    anxiety-neurosis; that women who at bottom are
    indifferent to the consequences of a possible con-
    ception are just as liable to the neurosis as those
    who shudder at the possibility, and that all depends
    on which of the partners forfeits satisfaction in this
    method of intercourse.

    A further indication is furnished by the observ-
    ation, not before mentioned, that in whole groups
    of cases anxiety-neurosis is accompanied by a very
    noticeable abatement of sexual libido,t i. e. of dsych-
    ical desire; so that, on being told that their suffer-
    ings result from nsufficient satisfaction’, patients

    ı [This term is here used in its original sense of conscious sexual

    feeling; it was only later employed th i
    der I hi hear of mental Oybamie a son 58 a technical

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 97

    regularly answer that that is impossible, because all
    their need for it has now disappeared. From all
    these data: that an accumulation of excitation is
    involved; that the anxiety which probably represents
    this accumulated excitation is of somatic origin, so
    that it is somatic excitation which is accumulated;
    further, that the somatic excitation is of a sexual
    nature and that a decline in the psychical share in
    the sexual process goes along with it—all these data
    prepare our minds for the statement that the mechan-
    ism of anxiety-neurosis is to be sought in the deflec-
    tion of somatic sexual excitation from the Ppsychical
    field, and in an abnormal use of it, due to this deflection.

    This conception of the mechanism of anxiety-
    neurosis becomes clearer if we accept the following
    view of the sexual process, which relates primarily
    to men. In the sexually mature male organism
    somatic sexual excitation is produced—probably
    continuously—and periodically acts as a psychical
    stimulus. In order to define this idea more clearly,
    let us interpolate that this somatic sexual excitation
    takes the form of pressure on the walls of the vesi-
    cule seminales which are lined with nerve-endings;
    this visceral exeitation will then actually develop
    continuously, but only when it reaches a certain
    height will it be sufficient to overcome the resist-
    ance in the paths of conduction to the cerebral
    cortex and express itself as a psychical stimulus.
    Thereupon the constellation of sexual ideas existing
    in the mind becomes charged with energy and a
    psychical state of libidinous tension comes into
    existence, bringing with it the impulse to relieve
    this tension. The necessary psychical relief can
    only be effected by what I shall describe as a specific
    or adequate activity. For the male sexual impulse
    this adequate activity consists in a complicated
    7

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    98 COLLECTED PAPERS v

    spinal reflex act resulting in the relief of the tension
    at these nerve-endings and in all the preparatory
    psychical processes necessary to induce this reflex.
    Nothing but the adequate activity would be effec-
    tive; for, once it has reached the required level,
    the somatic sexual excitation is continuously trans-
    muted into psychical excitation; the activity which
    will free the nerve-endings from burdensome pres-
    sure and so abolish the whole of the somatic excit-
    ation present, thus allowing the subcortical tracts
    to re-establish their resistance, must absolutely be
    carried into operation.

    I will refrain from describing more complicated
    forms of the sexual process in this manner. I will
    only add the statement that in essentials this formula
    is applicable also to women, notwithstanding the
    confusion introduced into the problem by all the
    artificial arresting and stunting that the female
    sexual impulse undergoes. In women also we must
    postulate a somatic sexual excitation, and a con-
    dition in which this excitation becomes a psychical
    stimulus, evoking libido and the impulse to a specific
    activity to which sensual pleasure is attached. Where
    women are concerned, however, we cannot state
    what is the process analogous to the relief of tension
    in the vesicule seminales.

    The ztiology of neurasthenia proper as well as
    of anxiety-neurosis can now be brought within the
    compass of this conception of the sexual process.
    Neurasthenia arises whenever a less adequate relief
    (activity) takes the place of the adequate one, thus,
    when masturbation or spontaneous emission replaces
    normal coitus under the most favourable condi-
    tions; while anxiety-neurosis is produced by all those
    factors which prevent the somatic sexual excitation
    from being assimilated psychically. The clinical

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 99

    symptoms of anxiety-neurosis appear when the
    somatic sexual excitation that is deflected from the
    mind is expended subcortically in quite inadequate
    reactions.

    I shall now try to test the ztiological conditions
    of anxiety-neurosis given above, in order to see
    whether they show the common character I have
    ascribed to them. The first »tiological factor in men
    that I mentioned is voluntary abstinence. Abstin-
    ence consists in foregoing the specific activity which
    otherwise follows upon libido. Privation of this
    kind can have two consequences, namely, that the
    somatie excitation becomes augmented by accu-
    mulation, and secondly, that it is then dissipated
    along other paths, through which it may find its
    discharge more easily than along the path to the
    mind. Libido will therefore subside again and the
    excitation will express itself instead subcortically as
    anxiety. In cases where libido does not subside or
    where the somatic excitation is expended by a short
    cut in emissions, or where it actually becomes ex-
    hausted in consequence of being restrained, anything
    else may arise, but not anxiety-neurosis. Abstin-
    ence leads to anxiety-neurosis in the way described.
    Abstinence is also the agent in the second ztiological
    group, that of frustrated excitement. The third case,
    that of coitus reservatus with regard for the woman,
    acts by disturbing the psychical state of prepared-
    ness for the sexual process, in that it adds to the
    task of dealing with the sexual affect another, a
    deflecting, psychical task. In consequence of this
    psychical deflection libido also gradually subsides,
    the further developments being then the same as
    in abstinence. Anxiety in ageing men (the male
    climacteric) requires another explanation. There is
    no reduction in libido here; but, just as during the
    „x

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    Ioo COLLECIED PAPERS Vv

    climacteric in women, such an increase in the pro-
    duction of somatic excitation occurs that the psyche
    proves relatively unable to master it.

    There is no greater difficulty in bringing the ztio-
    logical conditions in women within the scope of our
    theory than in the case of men. Virginal anxiety
    is a particularly clear example; the constellations
    of ideas to which the somatic sexual excitation
    should become attached are not yet sufficiently
    developed. In anzsthetic newly-married women
    anxiety only appears when the first acts of intercourse
    arouse a sufficient quantity of somatic excitation.
    When local indications of the state of excitement
    (such as spontaneous local sensations, desire to mict-
    urate and the like) are lacking, then anxiety is also
    absent. In cases where intercourse involves ejaculatio
    pr&cox or coitus interruptus, the explanation is
    similar to that given for men—Jibido gradually
    declines from the psychically unsatisfying act, while
    the excitation called forth by the act is expended
    subcortically. An estrangement between the somatic
    and the psychical in the course taken by sexual
    excitation is established sooner and is more difficult
    to remove in women than in men. In widowhood
    and in voluntary abstinence, as also in the climac-
    teric, the process is the same in women as in men;
    although in abstinence there must also be the addi-
    tional factor of an intentional repression of sexual
    ideas which the abstinent woman battling with
    desire must frequently resolve upon, and similarly,
    at the time of the menopause, the detestation with
    which the ageing woman regards the unduly increased
    libido must come into operation.

    The two last ztiological conditions enumerated
    also seem to fall into line without difficulty.

    The tendency to anxiety in masturbators who

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS IO0I

    have become neurasthenic is explained by the fact
    that these persons very easily pass into a condition
    of ‘abstinence’ after they have for so long been accus-
    tomed immediately to discharge every access of
    somatic excitation, however small, although not in
    a normal manner. Finally, the last case, in which
    anxiety-neurosis arises from serious illness, over-
    work, exhausting sick-nursing, etc., may be brought
    into relation with the mode of action of coitus inter-
    ruptus and then find a simple interpretation: by
    reason of the deflection of interest the mind is no
    longer capable of mastering the somatic sexual ex-
    citation, a task which is continuously incumbent on
    it. We know to what a low level libido can sink
    under these conditions; and we have here an ex-
    cellent example of a neurosis which has, it is true,
    no sexual etiology, but nevertheless shows a sexual
    mechanism.

    The theory here developed shows the symptoms
    of anxiety-neurosis to be in some measure surrogates
    for the specific activity which should follow upon
    sexual excitation, but has not done so. In further
    corroboration of this I may point out that even in
    normal coitus the excitation expresses itself also
    in accelerated breathing, palpitations, sweating, con-
    gestion and so on. In the corresponding anxiety-
    attacks of our neurosis we see the dyspnea, pal-
    pitations, etc. of coitus in an isolated and exaggerated
    form.

    The question may now be asked: Why does the
    nervous system under such conditions—of psychical
    incapacity to master sexual excitation—take on the
    particular affective state of anxiety? The reply
    may be indicated somewhat as follows: The psyche
    develops the affect of anxiety when it feels itself
    incapable of dealing (by an adequate reaction) with

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    Io2 COLLECTED PAPERS v

    a task (danger) approaching it externally; it develops
    the neurosis of anxiety when it feels itself unequal
    to the task of mastering (sexual) excitation arising
    endogenously. That is to say, 12 acts as if it had
    projected this excitation into the outer world. The
    affect and the neurosis corresponding to it stand
    in a close relation to each other; the first is the
    reaction to an exogenous, the second to an analogous,
    endogenous, excitation. The affect is a state which
    passes rapidiy, the neurosis is a chronic state; be-
    cause an exogenous excitation acts like a single
    shock, an endogenous one like a constant pressure.
    The nervous system veacts to an internal source of
    excitation with a neurosis, just as it reacts to an analo-
    gous external one with a corresponding affect.

    IV. RELATION TO OTHER NEUROSES

    There are still a few words to be said concerning
    the relation of anxiety-neurosis to the other neuroses
    in respect of its incidence and its inner connections
    with them.

    The purest cases of anxiety-neurosis are as a rule
    the most developed. These cases are found among
    young and sexually potent persons; they show a
    uniform ztiology and no very long duration.

    More frequently, however, anxiety symptoms occur
    contemporaneously and in combination with those
    of neurasthenia, hysteria, obsessions and melancholia.
    If because of this clinical confusion we are to refrain
    from distinguishing anxiety-neurosis as a self-con-
    tained unity, then to be logical we should have in
    addition to renounce the distinction between hysteria
    and neurasthenia which has been acquired so labor-
    jously.

    For the analysis of ‘mixed neuroses’ I can advocate
    the following important formula: Wherever a mixed

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 103

    neurosis exists a combination of several specific etio-
    logies may be discovered.

    The number of ztiological factors which condi-
    tions a mixed neurosis may occur quite fortuitously ;
    for instance, if a fresh injurious factor adds its
    effect to those already existing, e. g. a woman who
    had always been hysterical begins at a certain point
    in her married life to experience coitus reservatus
    and then acquires anxiety-neurosis in addition to
    her hysteria; a man who had previously been in the
    habit of masturbating, and had become neurasthenic,
    becomes engaged to be married and is sexually roused
    during the intimacy with his fiancee, and then
    acquires anxiety-neurosis in addition to his neuras-
    thenia.

    In other cases the number of ztiological factors is
    no accident; on the contrary, some one of them has
    brought another into activity; for example, a woman
    whose husband practises coitus reservatus without
    regard to her satisfaction finds herself compelled to
    relieve by masturbation the distressing excitation
    aroused by the act, as a result of which she develops
    an anxiety-neurosis, but not in a pure form, showing
    at the same time symptoms of neurasthenia; another
    woman in the same injurious situation will have
    to battle with lewd thoughts and visions, against
    which she struggles to defend herself, and will in
    this way develop obsessional ideas as well as the
    anxiety-neurosis as a result of coitus interruptus;
    lastly, a third woman’s husband will lose his attrac-
    tion for her in consequence of coitus interruptus and
    she will develop an affection for another man which
    she carefully keeps secret, as a result of which we
    find a mixture of anxiety-neurosis and hysteria.

    In a third category of mixed neuroses the inter-
    relation of the symptoms is even closer, in that the

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    104 COLLECTED PAPERS V

    very same ztiological determinant regularly and
    simultaneousiy evokes both neuroses. Thus for
    example, the sudden sexual revelation which is
    active in cases of virginal anxiety always gives rise
    to hysteria as well as anxiety-neurosis; cases of
    voluntary abstinence are for the most part from
    the beginning united with true obsessional ideas;
    coitus interruptus never seems to me to be able to
    provoke a pure anxiety-neurosis in men, but always
    a combination of it with neurasthenia; and so on.

    It follows from these considerations that the
    ztiological conditions for the incidence of the neur-
    oses must be distinguished more clearly from their
    specific atiological factors. The former, for example,
    coitus interruptus, masturbation and abstinence, are
    still capable of various interpretations; each one of
    them can produce many neuroses; only the ztio-
    logical factors into which they can be resolved, such
    as inadequate vehief, psychical inadequacy, defence by
    substitution, have an unequivocal and specific relation
    to the ztiology of the individual great neuroses.

    * * *

    In its essence anxiety-neurosis presents the most
    interesting similarities to and differences from the
    other great neuroses, particularly neurasthenia and
    hysteria. It shares with neurasthenia its main
    characteristic: the source of the excitation, the
    inciting factor in the disturbance, is somatic in nature,
    whereas in hysteria and the obsessional neurosis it
    is psychical in nature. In other respects we sce
    rather a kind of antithesis between the symptoms
    of neurasthenia and those of anxiety-neurosis which
    may be summed up in the words: impoverishment
    or accumulation of excitation respectively. This
    antithesis does not prevent the two neuroses from

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    1894 THE ANXIETY-NEUROSIS 105

    being combined with one another, but is nevertheless
    clearly demonstrated by the fact that the most
    extreme forms of both neuroses are also the purest.

    In symptomatology anxiety-neurosis and hysteria
    have many points in common, which need to be
    better appreciated. The appearance of symptoms
    either in a chronic form or as attacks, the par-
    xsthesias grouped like aur&, the hyperssthesias
    and points of pressure which are found in certain
    surrogates of the anxiety-attack (dyspnea and
    heart-attacks), the exacerbation (through conversion)
    of pains perhaps having an organic basis—these and
    other common features even permit the conjecture
    that much of what we attribute to hysteria may
    with more justification be laid at the door of anxiety-
    neurosis. If we go into the mechanism of the two
    neuroses so far as it has been possible to discover it
    up to the present, aspects come to light which sug-
    gest that anxiety-neurosis is actually the somatic
    counterpart of hysteria. In cach of them there is
    an accumulation of excitation—which perhaps ac-
    counts for the similarity of the symptoms already
    described; in each of them there is a Psychical in-
    adequacy as a consequence of which abnormal somatic
    processes come about. In each of them there occurs
    a deflection of excitation to the somatic field instead
    of psychical assimilation of it; the difference is merely
    this, that in anxiety-neurosis the excitation (in the
    displacement of which the neurosis expresses itself)
    is purely somatic (the somatic sexual excitation),
    whereas in hysteria it is purely psychical (evoked
    by conflict). Little wonder then that hysteria and
    anxiety-neurosis are regularly combined with one
    another, as in ‘virginal anxiety’ or ‘sexual hysteria’,
    and that hysteria simply borrows a number of its
    symptoms from the anxiety-neurosis. These intimate

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    106 COLLECTED PAPERS v

    relations between anxiety-neurosis and hysteria pro-
    vide a new argument for demanding the distinction
    of anxiety-neurosis from neurasthenia; for if this
    distinction is not admitted then neither are we
    justified in maintaining the distinction between
    neurasthenia and hysteria which was so laboriously
    come by and is so indispensable for the theory of
    the neuroses.