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1 her fled from the situation or experienced a panic attack.
2 all, and one who received placebo suffered a panic attack.
3 icipation of the next uncued (unpredictable) panic attack.
4 f internal and external cues predictive of a panic attack.
5 in both twins, with one twin experiencing a panic attack.
6 d periods of increased anxiety or tension or panic attack.
7 esponse to a conditioned fear stimulus and a panic attack.
8 ptoms and least correlated with reduction in panic attacks.
9 rs to be a genuine risk factor for secondary panic attacks.
10 est for the families of the probands without panic attacks.
11 asing the number of full and limited-symptom panic attacks.
12 the pattern observed during the 34 reported panic attacks.
13 development of neurological symptoms during panic attacks.
14 son subjects, and this increase preceded the panic attacks.
15 cur in different patients from m-CPP-induced panic attacks.
16 AS predicts panic attacks.
17 vestibular symptoms between, but not during, panic attacks.
18 substance abuse or substance dependence, or panic attacks.
19 nxiety disorder with recurrent, debilitating panic attacks.
20 ically to suppress excessive arousal such as panic attacks.
21 condition caused by the experience of uncued panic attacks.
22 mpared with young persons with no history of panic attacks.
23 with a significantly greater risk of current panic attacks.
24 n implicated in the pathophysiology of acute panic attacks.
25 ence respiration-related difficulties during panic attacks.
26 r the co-occurrence of cigarette smoking and panic attacks.
27 f the co-occurrence of cigarette smoking and panic attacks.
28 inent depersonalization/derealization during panic attacks.
29 icide attempts than were adolescents without panic attacks.
30 be one of the mechanisms linking smoking to panic attacks.
31 , 27 patients with anxiety but no history of panic attacks, 13 patients with depressive disorders but
33 ic ethnicity, two or more prior stressors, a panic attack, a low level of social support, the death o
35 two were characterized by past or concurrent panic attacks, a rate that was not significantly differe
39 isorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and panic attack among n=10,206 US Army soldiers and veteran
41 ed an increased risk for first occurrence of panic attack and disorder; the risk was higher in active
43 Of the 115 patients, 41% (N = 47) reported panic attacks and 17% (N = 20) met screening criteria fo
45 re used to determine the association between panic attacks and cigarette smoking and to determine whe
46 ents with PTSD experienced yohimbine-induced panic attacks and had significantly greater increases co
47 ts (31%) with PTSD experienced m-CPP-induced panic attacks and had significantly greater increases co
48 ed anxiety and sympathetic drive seen during panic attacks and in hypercapnic states such as COPD.
49 provocation on the subsequent development of panic attacks and panic disorder in nonclinical subjects
50 Evidence from a family study suggests that panic attacks and panic disorder may be related genetica
51 (N = 115) were screened for the presence of panic attacks and panic disorder with a self-report ques
52 sought to determine the association between panic attacks and psychoticism among young adults in the
56 s were used to estimate associations between panic attacks and suicidal ideation and suicide attempts
57 ds to the evidence of an association between panic attacks and suicide attempts during the middle yea
58 study was to investigate the association of panic attacks and suicide attempts in a community-based
59 direction (i.e., from prior smoking to first panic attack) and the possibility of a higher risk in ac
60 ysthymia, generalized anxiety disorders, and panic attacks) and drug use during the previous 12 month
61 ionnaire-2 [PHQ-2], GAD-2, and an item about panic attacks), and a diagnostic evaluation using PHQ-9
63 gonists acting at this receptor can suppress panic attacks, and both inverse agonists and antagonists
64 rder are highly susceptible to CO(2)-induced panic attacks, and depressed patients appear to be insen
66 rformance fears, unexpected and/or triggered panic attacks, anticipatory anxiety, and avoidance behav
70 h previous findings, these data suggest that panic attacks are associated with greater risk of cigare
73 ienced significantly more panic symptoms and panic attacks, as well as elevated respiratory rates.
74 were used to estimate the risk for onset of panic attacks associated with prior smoking and vice ver
76 scored highly for PTSD-related symptoms and panic attacks at 8 wks (p = .023 and .014, respectively)
78 sorder, with anxiety disorders (particularly panic attacks) being the most common comorbid condition.
79 -occurrence of regular cigarette smoking and panic attacks but did not predict either panic attacks o
83 o Pavlovian conditioning, failure to predict panic attacks could be due to a basic deficit in conditi
85 cantly lower in those who subsequently had a panic attack during 5% CO(2) breathing than those who di
86 ic ethnicity, two or more prior stressors, a panic attack during or shortly after the events, residen
89 ensitivity to CO(2) and in the threshold for panic attacks during hypoxic and hypercapnic states.
93 ty Survey respondents with panic disorder or panic attacks, female respondents were more likely than
95 ic disorder have generally used reduction in panic attack frequency as the primary measure of improve
96 rtion of the morbidity of panic disorder and panic attack frequency assessments are unreliable, studi
98 easures, including global improvement, total panic attack frequency, phobic symptoms, and functional
100 laxis, undifferentiated somatoform disorder, panic attacks, globus hystericus, vocal cord dysfunction
102 th panic disorder who had a low frequency of panic attacks had elevated daytime corticotropin levels
104 ' goal was to determine whether treatment of panic attacks has a protective effect on the risk of maj
107 re used to determine the association between panic attacks in adolescence (age 15-21) and psychoticis
108 idence of an independent association between panic attacks in adolescence and psychoticism during you
109 ion between A2AR polymorphisms and phobia or panic attacks in humans and prompts a therapeutic intere
110 oradrenergic agent yohimbine reliably induce panic attacks in humans with panic disorder but not in h
111 fusion has induced flashbacks accompanied by panic attacks in male combat veterans with posttraumatic
113 ough CO(2) breathing causes a higher rate of panic attacks in patients with PD than other groups (exc
118 of 35% CO(2) evoked not only fear, but also panic attacks, in three rare patients with bilateral amy
119 ent in frequency of full and limited-symptom panic attacks, intensity of full panic attacks, phobic f
121 -response relationship suggests that primary panic attack is a marker, rather than a causal risk fact
124 nts, which were drug hypersensitivity (n=1), panic attack (n=1), pyrexia (n=1), and COVID-19 (n=1).
129 and panic attacks but did not predict either panic attacks or cigarette smoking in the absence of the
131 tic anxiety ratings, but not the presence of panic attacks or of any lifetime anxiety disorder, added
132 der if the proband with bipolar disorder had panic attacks or panic disorder was calculated with logi
135 any anxiety disorder [OR = 1.3 (1.1, 1.6)], panic attacks [OR = 1.6 (1.1, 2.1)], panic disorder [OR
136 groups based on a history of panic disorder, panic attacks, or no panic attacks in the probands.
139 who completed the study, the mean number of panic attacks per week dropped by 88% in the sertraline-
140 ted-symptom panic attacks, intensity of full panic attacks, phobic fear, anxiety, and depressive symp
141 d safety of fluoxetine treatment in reducing panic attacks, phobic symptoms, anxiety, and depressive
143 The findings suggest that the perception of panic attacks reflects central rather than peripheral re
146 site variable and patients with a history of panic attacks reported more severe medication side effec
150 patients had a higher rate of CO(2)-induced panic attacks than depressed patients and normal subject
152 subsyndromal panic disorder characterized by panic attacks that failed to meet either the criterion o
153 adjustment for confounding factors, having a panic attack was still associated with an increased rate
156 met DSM-III-R criteria for panic disorder or panic attacks were analyzed to test for gender differenc
160 ugs, the authors found that adolescents with panic attacks were three times more likely to have expre
161 umed alcohol experienced significantly fewer panic attacks when applying liberal panic criteria; howe
162 major depressive episodes (odds ratios: for panic attacks with depression, 6.2; for panic disorder w
164 neration, including revisiting alexithymia, 'panic attack without panic', dissociation, insecure atta
165 ncing depersonalization/derealization during panic attacks would be more likely to have a history of