Panic Disorder Treatment
Panic Disorder Is Real
Panic disorder is a chronic, relapsing, often debilitating condition
that can have devastating effects on a person's work, family, and social
interactions. Because its symptoms may mimic a variety of medical
conditions, panic disorder frequently goes undiagnosed. It is not uncommon
for people with panic disorder to see as many as 10 different doctors,
undergo many unnecessary tests, and suffer for years before obtaining a
correct diagnosis.
The good news is that, once diagnosed, panic disorder is highly
treatable. In fact, appropriate treatment can reduce or completely prevent
panic attacks in 70 to 90 percent of patients--particularly when panic
disorder is recognized early. Even if patients relapse, recurrent attacks
can be treated effectively. Tragically, today just one in three people
with panic disorder receives appropriate treatment.
Panic Disorder Symptoms
Panic disorder is characterized by panic attacks--acute episodes of
terror accompanied by a sudden barrage of symptoms, including at least
four of the following:
- Racing or pounding heartbeat
- Chest pains
- Dizziness
- Nausea
- Difficulty breathing
- Flushes or chills
- Sweating
- Tingling or numbness in the hands
- Dreamlike sensations or perceptual distortions
- Fear of losing control and doing something embarrassing
- Fear of dying
- Sense of impending doom
Panic attacks typically occur spontaneously, with no apparent trigger.
In fact, they can even begin during sleep. Attacks usually last for a few
minutes--rarely longer--yet they often feel like an eternity for the
patient.
All too often, patients with panic disorder experience such extreme
distress that they present repeatedly to emergency departments or other
health care professionals. With each panic attack, they may fear they are
dying from a heart attack, or suffering from a respiratory problem,
neurological disorder, or gastrointestinal condition. They may also fear
that they are losing control or becoming psychotic.
When a person has repeated panic attacks and feels severe anxiety
about having another attack, he or she has panic disorder. Panic
disorder tends to worsen over time if not effectively treated.
Proper Diagnosis Is Critical
The criteria noted above should distinguish panic disorder from
everyday anxiety and stress. To help confirm a panic disorder diagnosis,
consider the following approach:
- To differentiate panic disorder from other medically important
conditions, the patient should, of course, have a thorough physical
examination. Panic disorder symptoms mimic other conditions, such as
myocardial infarction, cardiac arrhythmias, hyperthyroidism, and
certain types of epilepsy.
- It is important to probe the emotional components of the patient's
symptoms. Patients may focus on only one or two symptoms as they
describe the attacks to you, concentrating only on their physical
sensations and not on the fears they experience. By asking patients to
describe their feelings about the attacks, you may be able to more
quickly identify panic disorder. You will also be more likely to
identify depression or other concurrent conditions that should be
considered in the treatment plan.
- It can be constructive to probe for environmental factors that
trigger panic attacks in some people. For example, in susceptible
persons, attacks may occur during or within 6 months of such stressful
life events as the death of a loved one, divorce, geographic
relocation, childbirth, or surgery. Panic attacks can also be
triggered by large doses of caffeine, some cold medicines, and cocaine
and marijuana. If someone has a substance abuse problem, it will have
to be treated before panic disorder can be addressed effectively.
Panic Disorder Can Seriously Harm Your Patients
Even though panic attacks do not represent an immediate danger to the
life of the patient, panic disorder can have far more harmful consequences
than many other serious medical conditions:
- Many people with panic disorder develop fears about situations they
associate with panic attacks and begin to avoid them. Their lives
become an ordeal of chronic fear, and they may become greatly
restricted in their ability to carry out normal activities like
grocery shopping, traveling, and even leaving home--a condition known
as agoraphobia.
- Panic disorder can radically impair family, work, and social
relationships. Patients may lose their jobs and independence.
- People with panic disorder may also suffer from clinical depression,
substance abuse, obsessive-compulsive disorder, or irritable bowel
syndrome. According to one study, 20 percent of people with panic
disorder attempt suicide.
- Apart from the suffering experienced by the patient, untreated panic
disorder is costly to both the patient and the medical system as a
whole--because of repeated visits to doctors and emergency departments
and unnecessary medical tests.
Causes Of Panic Disorder
Research suggests that panic disorder has both biological and
psychological components, which interact. Family and twin studies indicate
that panic disorder involves some genetic vulnerability.
Recent studies suggest that people with panic disorder have a low
tolerance for the body's normal physiological and psychological response
to stress; their body's alarm response goes off with little or no
provocation. The hypothesis that panic disorder patients may have learned
to perceive essentially normal physiological events as being dangerous may
help in understanding the lowered stress response threshold, giving rise
to a "false alarm." Some researchers theorize that the
disturbance in coping mechanisms is a product of repeated life stresses in
predisposed individuals, leading eventually to panic disorder. Research
also suggests that people with panic disorder may not be able to utilize
the body's own naturally produced anxiety-reducing substances. It may be
that the neuronal receptors that bind with these substances are abnormal
in people with panic disorder.
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) supports research and
education on the causes of panic disorder as well as its diagnosis,
treatment, and prevention. NIMH scientists and grantees are studying panic
disorder in both animals and humans, searching for possible genetic
causes, probing for brain and biochemical abnormalities, and examining
cognitive factors that may contribute to the condition.
Treatment Methods
According to a panel of experts convened in 1991 by the National
Institutes of Health and NIMH, panic disorder can be treated effectively
with cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), pharmacological therapy, and
possibly a combination of CBT and medication. Patients generally begin to
respond quickly to appropriate treatment. However, some treatments may
work better than others for certain patients. So, it is important to
monitor the response to treatment closely and reassess the treatment
strategy if there is no improvement after 6 to 8 weeks.
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
CBT teaches patients to anticipate the situations and bodily sensations
that are associated with their panic attacks. This awareness sets the
stage for helping the patient to control the attacks. Specially trained
therapists tailor CBT to the specific needs of each patient. The therapy
usually includes the following components:
- Helping patients identify and change patterns of thinking that cause
them to misperceive commonplace events or situations as dangerous and
to "think the worst." Patients often are unaware of how
deeply these anxiety-raising thoughts are ingrained.
- Teaching patients exercises to prevent the hyperventilation that
often triggers a panic attack. The exercises also help the patient to
replace alarmist thoughts such as, "I'm dying," with more
appropriate ones, such as, "I'm just hyperventilating--I can
handle this."
- Helping patients become less fearful by safely and gradually
exposing them to situations and physical sensations they avoid or find
frightening.
CBT is a short-term treatment, typically lasting 12 to 15 sessions over
several months. Patients with panic disorder who go through CBT are
reported to have very few adverse effects and a relatively low relapse
rate of panic attacks.
CBT requires special training. If you decide to refer your patients
for cognitive-behavioral therapy, check to see if the professional has the
requisite training and experience in this method of panic disorder
treatment.
Medication
Several classes of medication can reduce or prevent panic attacks and
therefore substantially decrease patients' anticipatory anxiety about
having attacks. The medications most often used are:
- Antidepressants, including tricyclics, monoamine oxidase inhibitors,
and serotonin reuptake inhibitors
- Certain high-potency benzodiazepines
Each of these classes of medications works differently and has
different side effects. The latest information about the pharmacotherapy
of panic and related disorders is available in clinical handbooks of
psychotherapeutic medications. For most of these medications, treatment
lasts 6 months to a year. With all of them, proper dosing and monitoring
is essential.
The practitioner who administers medication for panic disorder should
be well versed in the clinical use of the relevant psychotherapeutic
medications. It is important to start with a low dose and increase it
gradually. Build up to the recommended dosage for the particular
medication you are prescribing, watching for troublesome side effects as
well as for a decrease in panic attacks. The goal should be to stop the
panic attacks. Make sure the patient is maintained on a dose that is in
the therapeutic range. When withdrawing medication, reduce the dosage
gradually, and watch for possible relapse. To improve compliance, it is
important to educate the patient about the medication and its side
effects.
Combining CBT and Medication
A combination of CBT and pharmacotherapy may offer rapid relief, high
effectiveness, and a low relapse rate. The combination may be particularly
helpful for patients with agoraphobia. NIMH is conducting a large study
evaluating the effectiveness of combining these treatments.
Who Can Treat Panic Disorder?
Panic disorder patients can be treated by mental health professionals
or by primary health care providers.
Source: National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, 1994
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