| Literature DB >> 35495823 |
Narayana Manjunatha1, Dushad Ram2.
Abstract
The under-or misdiagnosis, and symptomatic treatment of the panic disorder (PD), despite high prevalent medical illness, is common among non-psychiatric physicians. The non-psychiatrist physician's role is vital in the care of PD as most patients initially approach general medical settings for medical help, including primary care. However, a significant proportion is undiagnosed and undergoes either unnecessary investigation, misdiagnosed, or mismanaged even among post-Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting patients, which profoundly affects the patients functioning and quality of life. This article aims to provide overviews of relevant epidemiological aspects, presenting features across medical specialties with respective diagnostic dilemmas, assessment, and management of the PD in their general medical settings, including emergency visits. Apart from psychiatrists, this will also assist non-psychiatrist physicians across all medical specialties, including general practitioners, to understand, identify, and provide the first line evidence-based pharmacotherapy and address the unmet need of patients with PD in their day-to-day busy clinical practice. This paper also provides a referral guide for non-psychiatrist physicians to refer to psychiatrists for further management after their first-line management. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Clinical pathways; general medical practice; panic disorder; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35495823 PMCID: PMC9051703 DOI: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_888_21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Family Med Prim Care ISSN: 2249-4863
Symptoms with respective specialty and their usual investigations
| Symptom | Symptom domain | Presenting to | Common investigations ordered (apart from routine) | Common treatment is given (apart from drugs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palpitations, pounding heart, tachycardia | Cardiovascular | Cardiologist | Electrocardiogram Troponin levels, | Cardiac Catheterization |
| Sweating | Autonomic | Endocrinologists | Hormone levels (T3, T4, TSH) | Hormone supplements, antihormone drugs |
| Shortness of breath, | Pulmonary | Chest physician/Pulmonologist, ENT specialist | Chest X-Ray | Nebulization, |
| Dizziness or lightheadedness, unsteadiness, faintness, Impaired memory | Neurological | Neurologist | MRI Brain | - |
| Choking | Gastrointestinal | Gastroenterologists | Endoscopy | - |
| Depersonalization | Psychological | Faith healers | - | - |
The symptoms of a panic attack
| 1. Palpitations, pounding heart or accelerated heart rate. | 9. Chills or heat sensations. |
| 2. Sweating. | 10. Paraesthesias (numbness or tingling sensations). |
| 3. Trembling or shaking. | 11. Derealization (feelings of unreality) or depersonalization (being detached from oneself). |
| 4. Sensations of shortness of breath or smothering. | 12. Fear of losing control or “going crazy.” |
| 5. Feelings of choking. | 13. Fear of dying. |
| 6. Chest pain or discomfort. | |
| 7. Nausea or abdominal distress. | |
| 8. Feeling dizzy, unsteady, light-headed, or faint. |
Neuroanatomy of Panic Disorder
| Structure | The implicated symptoms |
|---|---|
| Amygdala | involved in fear and anxiety processing, regulate the behavioral and autonomic responses. |
| Parabrachial Nucleus | producing a rapid breathing |
| hypothalamus (lateral nucleus) | activating the sympathetic nervous system- perspiration, epigastric discomfort, dryness of mouth, palpitation, tremulousness. |
| Locus Ceruleus | Norepinephrine release leading to tachycardia, elevated blood pressure, flight fight response |
| Hypothalamus (paraventricular) | Hypothalamo-Pitutory-Axis activation and release of adrenocorticoids |
| Periaqueductal Grey | phobic avoidance, defensive behaviors, postural freezing |
| Prefrontal cortex | Processing of phobic avoidance, learned extinction processes |
Tools to assess Panic Disorder
| Screening tools | Diagnostic instruments |
|---|---|
| Panic Disorder Self-Report[ | Anxiety Disorder Interview Schedule for DSM-5[ |
| Anxiety Disorder Diagnostic Questionnaire[ | Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview[ |
| Generalized Anxiety Disorder -7[ | Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV[ |
| Quick Psycho Diagnostics[ | Symptom Driven Diagnostic System for Primary Care[ |
| Mental Health Index 5[ | |
| Psychiatric Diagnostic Screening Questionnaire[ | |
| Clinical Schedules for Primary Care Psychiatry[ | |
| Severity Rating scale | Other purposes |
| Beck Anxiety Inventory[ | Panic attack questionnaire[ |
| Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale[ | Panic attack symptoms and cognition questionnaire[ |
| Panic Disorder Severity Scale[ | Panic belief questionnaire[ |
| Panic and Agoraphobia Scale[ | Self-efficacy to control Panic Attacks Questionnaire[ |
| Panic associated symptoms scale[ | Panic Attack Frequency Calendar[ |
| NIMH Panic Questionnaire[ | Panic appraisal questionnaire[ |
| Nocturnal Panic Screen[ |
Physical illnesses as a differential diagnosis of Panic Disorder[55]
| System | Diseases | |
|---|---|---|
| Cardiovascular Diseases | Anaemia | Hypertension |
| Angina | Mitral valve prolapses | |
| Congestive heart failure | Myocardial infarction | |
| Hyperactive adrenergic state | Paradoxicalatrial tachycardia | |
| Pulmonary Diseases | Asthma | Pulmonary embolus |
| Hyperventilation | ||
| Neurological Diseases | Cerebrovascular disease | Migraine |
| Epilepsy | Multiple sclerosis | |
| Huntington’s disease | Transient ischemic attack | |
| Infection | Tumour | |
| Meniere’s disease | Wilson’s disease | |
| Endocrine Diseases | Addison’s disease | Hypoglycemia |
| Carcinoid syndrome | Hypoparathyroidism | |
| Cushing’s syndrome | Menopausal disorders | |
| Diabetes | Pheochromocytoma | |
| Hyperthyroidism | Premenstrual syndrome | |
| Drug Intoxications | Amphetamine | Hallucinogens |
| Amyl nitrite | Marijuana | |
| Anticholinergics | Nicotine | |
| Cocaine | Theophylline | |
| Alcohol | Opiates and opioids | |
| Drug Withdrawal | Antihypertensives | Sedative-hypnotics |
| Other Conditions | Anaphylaxis | Systemic infections |
| B12 deficiency | Systemic lupus erythematosus | |
| Electrolyte disturbances | Temporal arteritis | |
| Heavy metal poisoning | Uraemia |
Difference in the symptomatology of Panic Attacks from Seizure, Syncope and Heart Attack
| Features | Panic Attack | Partial Seizure | Syncope | Heart Attack |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immediate precipitating factors | May be situationally predisposed usually none | Usually none | Emotional stress, Valsalva, orthostatic hypotension, cardiac aetiologies | Physical or emotional Stress |
| Premonitory symptoms | Generalized anxiety in few cases | None or aura (e.g., odd odour) epigastric aura | Tiredness, nausea, diaphoresis, tunnelling of vision | Chest pain, anxiety, abnormal sensation in left arm |
| Posture at onset | variable | Variable | Usually erect | Variable |
| unconsciousness | If present gradual over seconds to minutes | Often immediate | Gradual over seconds | If present gradual over seconds to minutes |
| onset | Peak within minutes | sudden | gradual | usually gradual, over several minutes, and rarely instantaneous |
| Disorientation and sleepiness after event | Usually absent | Many minutes to hours | <5 min | Usually absent |
| Aching of muscles after event | Usually absent | Often | Sometimes | Usually absent |
| Biting of tongue | Usually absent | Sometimes | Rarely | Absent |
| Incontinence | Usually absent | Sometimes | Sometimes | Usually absent |
| Headache | Sometimes | Sometimes | Rarely | sometimes |
| Consciousness | Alert | Alert but may progress to impairment | impaired | Usually alert may be impaired |
| Dejavu hallucinations | Very rare | More than 5% | Very rare | Very rare |
| automatisms | Very infrequent | Common, progressing to CPS | Very infrequent | Very infrequent |
| Depressive symptoms | Commonly associated | uncommon | uncommon | uncommon |
| Anticipatory anxiety | Very common | uncommon | uncommon | uncommon |
| Interictal EEG | Normal | Often abnormal | Normal | Normal |
| ECG | normal | normal | normal | abnormal |
| MRI of temporal structures | Usually normal | Often abnormal | Usually normal | Usually Normal |
Antipanic Drugs
| Drug | Starting (mg) | Maintenance (mg) |
|---|---|---|
| SSRIs | ||
| Paroxetine | 5-10 | 20-60 |
| Paroxetine CR | 12.5-25 | 62.5 |
| Fluoxetine | 20 | 20-60 |
| Sertraline | 12.5-25 | 50-200 |
| Fluvoxamine | 12.5 | 100-150 |
| Citalopram | 10 | 20-40 |
| Escitalopram | 10 | 20 |
| Tricyclic Antidepressants | ||
| Clomipramine | 5-12.5 | 50-125 |
| Imipramine | 10-25 | 150-500 |
| Desipramine | 10-25 | 150-200 |
| Benzodiazepines | ||
| Alprazolam | 0.25-0.5 tid | 0.5-2 tid |
| Clonazepam | 0.25-0.5 bid | 0.5-2 bid |
| Diazepam | 2-5 bid | 5-30 bid |
| Lorazepam | 0.25-0.5 bid | 0.5-2 bid |
| Atypical Antidepressants | ||
| Venlafaxine | 6.25-25 | 50-150 |
| Venlafaxine XR | 37.5 | 150-225 |
SSRIs - Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors; bid - twice a day; tid - three times a day.
CBT model of Panic disorder
| Core patterns in panic disorder | Common Catastrophic Thoughts in Panic Disorder |
|---|---|
| Fears of symptoms of anxiety (anxiety sensitivity) | Fears of death or disability |
| Risk for onset of panic attacks | Fears of losing control/insanity |
| Risk for biological provocation of panic | I am going to lose control and scream; I am having a nervous breakdown; If I don’t escape, I will go crazy Fears of humiliation or embarrassment |
| Risk for panic disorder relapse | People will think something is wrong with me; They will think I am a lunatic |