Psychiatry research
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Psychiatry research · Feb 1988
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEffects of laboratory-induced panic-anxiety on subsequent provocative infusions.
The effects of infusion-induced panic-anxiety on subsequent pre-infusion anxiety ratings and infusion-induced panic attacks were studied in 64 panic disorder patients, in a double-blind randomized study using sodium lactate, isoproterenol, and placebo infusions. While there was a decrease of preinfusion anxiety from one infusion to the next infusion both for panickers and nonpanickers, there was no evidence of either a significant decrease or an increase in the frequency of subsequent panic attacks. These results suggest that there is neither a desensitizing nor a sensitizing effect of pharmacologically induced panic attacks on subsequent infusions in a serial three-infusion design.
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Psychiatry research · Feb 1988
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialLactate- and isoproterenol-induced panic attacks in panic disorder patients and controls.
In a double-blind study using sodium lactate and isoproterenol infusions to provoke panic attacks, 73 of 86 panic disorder patients and 10 of 45 controls panicked with lactate, and 58 of 86 patients and 4 of 45 controls panicked with isoproterenol. We measured baseline and peak anxiety ratings in 10 controls with lactate-induced panic attacks, 31 controls who did not panic during lactate infusions, and 63 panic disorder patients who did panic during lactate infusions. The controls who panicked with lactate had robust increases in their anxiety ratings very similar to the increases experienced by patients who panicked with lactate.