Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia

Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent unexpected panic attacks that can occur with or without agoraphobia. Agoraphobia is a disabling condition in which patients fear places in which escape might be difficult. Whether occurring as distinct disorders or together, panic disorder and agoraphobia are common, sometimes disabling, conditions.

Epidemiology

Panic disorder occurs more frequently in women, with a lifetime prevalence of 2% to 3%. The typical onset is in the 20s, with most cases beginning before age 30.

Agoraphobia also occurs more frequent1y in women, with a lifetime prevalence of between 2% and 6%. Only one third of patients with agoraphobia also have panic disorder. However, most patients with agoraphobia seen clinically also have panic disorder. This apparent contradiction is due to the fact that patients with agoraphobia alone are unlikely to seek treatment.

Etiology

The etiology of panic disorder is unknown. There are several popular biologic theories involving carbon dioxide (C0 2 ) hypersensitivity, abnormalities in lactate metabolism, an abnormality of the locus coeruleus (a region in the brain that regulates 1evel of arousal), and e1evated central nervous system catecholamine levels. The gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA) receptor also has been implicated as etiologic since patients respond well to benzodiazepines and panic is induced in patients with anxiety disorders using GABA antagonists.

Theorists posit that panic attacks are a conditioned response to a fearful situation. For example, a person has an automobile accident and experiences severe anxiety, including palpitations. Thereafter, palpitations alone, experienced during exercise or any sympathetic nervous system response, may induce the conditioned response of a panic attack.

Clinical Manifestations

History and Mental Status Examination
Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent unexpected panic attacks that can occur with or without
agoraphobia (see below). Panic attacks typically come on suddenly, peak within minutes, and last 5 to 30 minutes. The patient must experience 4 of 13 typical symptoms of panic outlined in Table 3-2.

To warrant the diagnosis, one of the following must occur for at least 1 month: persistent concern about having additional attacks, worry about the implications of the attack (losing control, “going crazy”), or a significant change of behavior related to the attacks (e.g., restriction of activities).

Agoraphobia is a disabling complication of panic disorder but can also occur in patients with no history of panic disorder. It is characterized by an intense fear of places or situations in which escape might be difficult (or embarrassing). Patients with agoraphobia and panic disorder typically fear having a panic attack in a public place and being embarrassed or unable to escape. Those with agoraphobia alone (two thirds of those with agoraphobia) simply avoid public arenas but do not have panic attacks.

Although some agoraphobic patients are so disabled that they are homebound, many are comforted by the presence of a companion, allowing them to enter some public places with less anxiety.

Differential Diagnosis
Panic attacks should be distinguished from the direct physiologic effects of a substance or a general medical condition. The panic attacks also cannot be accounted for by another mental disorder (such as social phobia or obsessive-compulsive disorder [OCDD] .

Management

Not surprisingly, the main treatments for panic disorder are pharmacotherapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy or their combination. Specific tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), specific monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO Is), selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), and high-potency benzodiazepines have been shown to be effective in controlled studies. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) involves the use of relaxation exercises and desensitization combined with education aimed at helping patients to understand that their panic attacks are a result of misinterpreting bodily sensations. Patients can then learn that the sensations are innocuous and self-limited, which diminishes the panicky response.

Exposure therapy, in which the patient incrementally confronts a feared stimulus, has been shown to be effective in treating agoraphobia.

KEY POINTS
1. Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent unexpected panic attacks.
2. Panic disorder can be seen with or without agoraphobia.
3. Panic disorder is treated with antidepressants and benzodiazepines and cognitive-behavioral techniques.
4. Agoraphobia is fear of not being able to (or being too embarrassed to) escape a place or situation.
5. Agoraphobia most often occurs alone (without panic).
6. Agoraphobia can be a complication of panic disorder.
7. Agoraphobia is treated with exposure therapy.

Provided by ArmMed Media
Revision date: July 7, 2011
Last revised: by David A. Scott, M.D.