Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011551 (depersonalization)
1,117 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Panic disorder is a subtype of anxiety manifested by discrete periods of apprehension or fear and at least four of the following somatic symptoms: dyspnea, palpitations, chest pain, choking, dizziness, depersonalization or derealization experience, paresthesias, hot and cold flashes, sweating, faintness, trembling, and fear of dying, going crazy, or doing something uncontrolled during an attack. Because the patient with panic disorder often selectively focuses on one of these somatic symptoms and may minimize or deny psychosocial distress, panic disorder is frequently misdiagnosed. As a result of the frightening nature of the symptoms, a pattern of overutilization of medical care systems frequently ensues. Panic disorder is usually precipitated by stressful life events, most commonly separation or loss, in a patient with a genetic or acquired vulnerability. As with other psychophysiologic illness (depression, duodenal ulcer) resolution of the acute stressful life event may not lead to resolutions of the physiologic changes. Two specific tricyclic antidepressants, imipramine and desipramine, have been shown to be effective therapeutic agents in treating panic disorder.
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PMID:Panic disorder. 663 52

Using cluster analysis of 207 patients with panic disorder (PD), we investigated the relationships between several panic symptoms at the time of panic attacks, which included anticipatory anxiety, agoraphobia, and 13 clinical symptoms based on the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual-III-Revised. Cluster analysis revealed three panic symptom clusters: cluster A (dyspnea, choking, sweating, nausea, flushes/chills); cluster B (dizziness, palpitations, trembling or shaking, depersonalization, agoraphobia, and anticipatory anxiety); and cluster C (fear of dying, fear of going crazy, paresthesias, and chest pain or discomfort). Generally, cluster A was comprised exclusively of physiological symptoms, among which respiratory symptoms were prominent, cluster B included both panic and non-panic symptoms such as agoraphobia and anticipatory anxiety, and cluster C was comprised chiefly of fear symptoms.
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PMID:The symptom structure of panic disorder: a trial using factor and cluster analysis. 868 87

A 34-year-old woman with a 9-year history of unprovoked attacks of anxiety and dyspnea associated with symptoms of depersonalization and derealization is presented. The attacks increased in frequency and were associated with internal derogatory voices, vivid frightening imagery, and suicidal ideation, leading to 3 emergency psychiatric hospitalizations in a period of less than 3 months. She had been treated unsuccessfully for a presumptive diagnosis of panic disorder without agoraphobia, prompting a reconsideration of this diagnosis. Although electroencephalography and magnetic resonance imaging findings were normal, temporal lobe epilepsy was considered and the patient responded rapidly and dramatically to carbamazepine. Panic disorder and temporal lobe epilepsy can be confused with each other; proper diagnosis is necessary for selection of effective pharmacotherapy. Although uncertain, the contribution of sustained exposure to carbon monoxide as an adult may have contributed to the emergence of panic symptoms, which would be an unusual clinical presentation.
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PMID:Temporal lobe epilepsy confused with panic disorder: implications for treatment. 1948 84