Physiological (heart rate, blood pressure, electrodermal activity), biochemical (epinephrine, norepinephrine, cortisol) and subjective parameters (self-rating score) of 33 patients with panic disorder (diagnoses according to DSM-III-R) before, during and after stress exposure were compared with those of healthy controls. As stressors a video containing frightening scenes (FS), mental arithmetic (MA), a video documenting a patient suffering from a panic attack (PA) and an improvised speech (IS) were applied. We found significantly higher baseline levels of electrodermal activity (EDA) and norepinephrine (NE) secretion and a subsequent further increase during stress exposure in panic disorder patients as compared with normal controls. The most potent stressors during the trial proved to be mental arithmetics and improvised speech, which was evident in both groups. The situation panic attack video appeared to be a "panic disorder patient-specific" stressor; here we noticed the most pronounced reactions in the patient group. Panic disorder patients had significantly higher self-rating scores of the parameters panicky feelings, anxiety and nervousness at the beginning and throughout the investigation. We conclude that panic disorder patients have a higher degree of activation compared with normal controls, which is evident regarding levels of electrodermal activity and norepinephrine secretion. Furthermore, the panic attack video appears to be a panic disorder patient-specific stressor.
A group of 27 patients with panic disorder with or without agoraphobia were compared with 10 control subjects before stress exposure. No statistically significant differences between patients and controls were found for the cardiovascular parameters. Skin conductance level and skin conductance reaction were significantly higher in the patient group. They also showed higher self-ratings in behavioural symptoms associated with anxiety. There were statistically significant higher venous plasma levels of norepinephrine in patients than in controls, although the epinephrine levels were similar. The number of binding sites of alpha 2-receptors and the affinity of 3H-yohimbine to the alpha 2-receptors on intact thrombocytes was statistically significantly lower in patients compared to controls. Significant differences between the gender groups of patients and controls were found for electrodermal activity and epinephrine levels. These data add further evidence to an overshooting activation of the noradrenergic pathway in patients with panic disorder, possibly based on a dysregulation of alpha 2-receptor.
To evaluate different responses in norepinephrine (NE), epinephrine (E), heart rate (HR), electrodermal activity (EDA) and subjective ratings to a 'neutral' and a 'patient-specific' stressor we compared nine anxiety patients with three or more panic attacks during the past week, 10 patients with no panic attacks during the past week and 10 controls, at baseline as well as during two stressors: a videotape containing horror scenes and a tape showing a patient having a panic attack. Both patient groups exhibited higher base levels of panicky feelings, anxiety, nervousness, NE and EDA. The panic attack tape proved a stressor that induced significantly more pronounced increases in subjective bodily symptoms, NE, E and EDA in the patients with three or more panic attacks. Our data suggest that patients with frequent panic attacks show higher reactivity to a stimulus that recalls previous experiences of panic attacks.
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