The Canadian journal of cardiology
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To examine the association among panic disorder, atypical chest pain and coronary artery disease (CAD). This article's purpose is to inform cardiologists of the prevalence of psychiatric disorders, primarily panic disorder, among patients consulting for chest pain. Panic disorder is described. Treatment modalities are summarized, and social, financial and medical consequences of nondetection are underlined. ⋯ Physicians should attend to the panic symptomatology and, when in doubt, refer possible panic patients with or without CAD to a mental health professional for assessment and treatment. Future panic prevalence studies in cardiology patients should be prospective, attempt to increase sample size and use randomized protocols where experimenters are blind to chest pain and medical diagnoses. Studies should also focus on CAD patients with atypical chest pain refractory to optimal cardiac therapy.