Psychophysiological reactions to two levels of voluntary hyperventilation in panic disorder.

尚未翻譯 尚未翻譯
类别 Primary study
期刊Journal of anxiety disorders
Year 2008
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Panic disorder (PD) patients usually react with more self-reported distress to voluntary hyperventilation (HV) than do comparison groups. Less consistently PD patients manifest physiological differences such as more irregular breathing and slower normalization of lowered end-tidal pCO(2) after HV. To test whether physiological differences before, during, or after HV would be more evident after more intense HV, we designed a study in which 16 PD patients and 16 non-anxious controls hyperventilated for 3 min to 25 mmHg, and another 19 PD patients and another 17 controls to 20 mmHg. Patients reacted to HV to 20 mmHg but not to 25 mmHg with more self-reported symptoms than controls. However, at neither HV intensity were previous findings of irregular breathing and slow normalization of pCO(2) replicated. In general, differences between patients and controls in response to HV were in the cognitive-language rather than in the physiological realm.
Epistemonikos ID: 39e299ac503f2d1fcbc3dcfaf83e7b2c00520a54
First added on: Apr 03, 2014