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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (dizziness)
9,689 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An 18-yr-old college freshman basketball player at a Division I university suffered chest pain, dyspnea, and dizziness followed by syncope while running a 400-m dash. After an extensive multidisciplinary workup that eliminated all organic causes, the patient, an only child from a remote rural area, was found to be suffering from panic attacks with mild features of agoraphobia. Exertional chest pain is a common complaint in young athletes. The etiologies are myriad and can be referable to many organ systems; however, the cause is usually benign. Psychogenic origin is uncommon but must be considered when organic causes have been ruled out and the patient's social history is suggestive.
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PMID:Chest pain and shortness of breath in a collegiate basketball player: case report and literature review. 156 45

Patients with panic disorder commonly report symptoms of dizziness and imbalance. We studied the relationship between objective measures of audiovestibular function, phenomenologic, and self-report measures of dysequilibrium and related somatic symptoms in a sample of panic disorder patients with and without agoraphobia, unselected for the complaint of dysequilibrium. Of seventeen patients evaluated by electronystagmography, 71 percent exhibited abnormal vestibular test findings. These latter patients had higher total anxiety ratings than patients without vestibular abnormalities. We conclude that patients with panic disorder warrant evaluation of audiovestibular function.
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PMID:Dysequilibrium and audiovestibular function in panic disorder: symptom profiles and test findings. 224 Jan 77

A battery of vestibular and audiological tests was administered to eight patients with panic disorder and 13 patients with agoraphobia and panic attacks, all of whom experienced dizziness during their panic attacks. Positional or spontaneous nystagmus was present in 67% of the subjects. Abnormal responses were found in caloric testing (56%), rotational testing (35%), and posturography (32%). Pure tone audiograms were abnormal in 26% of the subjects and acoustic reflexes were abnormal in 44% of the subjects. Six of eight patients tested had an abnormal brainstem auditory evoked potential. The possible importance of the findings and their implications for further research are discussed.
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PMID:Otoneurological examination in panic disorder and agoraphobia with panic attacks: a pilot study. 387 76

The symptom "vertigo" we find as a sign of many different diseases. A psychogenic cause must be considered, if organic failures are excluded by a complete examination. Such troubles we see as symptoms of endogenous psychosis and anxiety neurosis, especially aerophobia like agoraphobia, gephyrophia, and batophobia. In these cases dizziness appears as a covered form of anxiety.
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PMID:[Non-organically-induced vertigo]. 398 35

There is a striking similarity between the situations avoided by people with agoraphobia and the environments which provoke disorientation in people with organic balance disorders. This study investigated the possibility that agoraphobia might be linked to balance system dysfunction by comparing the results of balance system tests in 36 people with symptoms of panic and agoraphobia and 20 normal controls. A traditional battery of audiovestibular tests was supplemented with moving platform posturography, which assesses the postural instability induced by disorienting perceptual conditions. Subjects also completed questionnaire measures of somatic symptoms of dizziness and anxiety, agoraphobic cognitions, avoidance behaviour and state anxiety. Over 60% of the Ss with symptoms of panic and agoraphobia were destabilised by the disorienting perceptual conditions, compared with just 10% of the normal controls. Postural instability was strongly related to reported agoraphobic avoidance (r = 0.63, P < 0.01), even after controlling for symptoms, anxiety and agoraphobic cognitions. In our discussion we consider alternative interpretations of these findings, future directions for research, and implications for therapy.
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PMID:Relationship between balance system function and agoraphobic avoidance. 775 29

In a study of the prevalence of panic and other anxiety disorders in persons with complaints of dizziness, 87 patients referred to a clinic for vestibular disorders completed self-rating measures of anxiety and depression; 32 also underwent a structured diagnostic interview. Thirteen (14.9%) of the patients met the DSM-III-R criteria for panic disorder, agoraphobia, or both. They rated themselves as much more disabled by their dizziness than the patients with no psychiatric disorder. Panic disorder was equally prevalent among patients with and without vestibular disease. In some cases panic disorder may provide an explanation for the dizziness, whereas in others it may be a comorbid condition compounding the disability attributable to the vestibular disorder.
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PMID:Panic disorder in patients attending a clinic for vestibular disorders. 794 64

A panic attack is characterized by the abrupt onset of apprehension or fear, accompanied by symptoms such as dyspnea, palpitations, chest pain, dizziness, sweating, the feeling of going mad or the fear of dying. The feeling of anxiety often recedes into the background and such patients present to nonpsychiatric physicians with mainly somatic symptoms. The consequences of frequent panic attacks, named panic disorder, are agoraphobia with impairment of psychic and social functioning, increased prevalence of alcohol abuse, depression and, in particular, suicidal attempts. It is of the utmost importance that physicians recognize the somatic symptoms of panic anxiety and plan integrated treatment. The main therapeutic resources at present include antidepressants, selected benzodiazepines and behavioral treatments and are very successful in improving panic attacks and their consequences, which may long go undiagnosed.
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PMID:[Panic attacks]. 809 64

Side effects play a significant role in the selection of drugs to be used in panic disorder/agoraphobia whose polyphobic symptomatology often includes a suspiciousness about taking drugs and a fear of undesired side effects which may lead to the refusal of treatment. The safety, side effects and patients' acceptance of alprazolam and imipramine versus placebo were evaluated in 1168 subjects with panic disorder/agoraphobia who had been enrolled in the second phase of the Upjohn World Wide Panic Study. Side effects that worsened over baseline to a greater extent with alprazolam than with imipramine and placebo were sedation, fatigue/weakness, memory problems, ataxia and slurred speech. In the imipramine group blurred vision, tachycardia/palpitations, insomnia, sleep disturbance, excitement/nervousness, malaise, dizziness/faintness, headache, nausea/vomiting and decrease in appetite were worse than in the other groups. In the placebo group the anxious symptoms were most prominent. The highest level of compliance was shown in the alprazolam-treated group and the lowest in the placebo-treated group. Strong predictors of side effects were not observed. If a side effect profile is known, it will be easier for a clinician to choose the right drug and the appropriate management by taking into account compliance, safety and efficacy in each patient under treatment. Further information about side effects in long-term maintenance treatment would be of great clinical pertinence in ensuring safety and enhancing patients' quality of life.
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PMID:Adverse effects associated with the short-term treatment of panic disorder with imipramine, alprazolam or placebo. 820 96

Fifteen panic disorder patients with prominent dizziness underwent audiologic, caloric, and vestibuloocular reflex activity testing and were compared with normal controls. There were no abnormalities detected on audiologic and caloric tests. Compared with normal controls, panickers with dizziness showed a greater discrepancy between eye and head movements on vestibulo-ocular reflex activity in the dark. Panickers with prominent dizziness did not differ from a second control group of panickers with severe heart palpitations on a number of psychological tests. The results did not support the hypothesis that organic dizziness is etiologically important in the causation of panic or agoraphobia, but do suggest that vestibuloocular reflex activity should be further studied in panic disorder.
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PMID:Otoneurological functioning in panic disorder patients with prominent dizziness. 848 81

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


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