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A panic attack is a sudden, intense experience of
fear coupled with an overwhelming feeling of danger, accompanied by
physical symptoms of anxiety, such as a pounding heart, sweating,
and rapid breathing. A person with panic disorder may have repeated
panic attacks (at least several a month) and feel severe anxiety
about having another attack. |
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Each year, panic disorder affects one out of 63
Americans. While many people experience moments of anxiety, panic
attacks are sudden and unprovoked, having little to do with real
danger.
Panic disorder is a chronic, debilitating
condition that can have a devastating impact on a person's family,
work, and social life. Typically, the first attack strikes without
warning. A person might be walking down the street, driving a car,
or riding an escalator when suddenly panic strikes. Pounding heart,
sweating palms, and an overwhelming feeling of impending doom are
common features. While the attack may last only seconds or minutes,
the experience can be profoundly disturbing. A person who has had
one panic attack typically worries that another one may occur at any
time.
As the fear of future panic attacks deepens, the
person begins to avoid situations in which panic occurred in the
past. In severe cases of panic disorder, the victim refuses to leave
the house for fear of having a panic attack. This fear of being in
exposed places is often called agoraphobia.
People with untreated panic disorder may have
problems getting to work or staying on the job. As the person's
world narrows, untreated panic disorder can lead to depression,
substance abuse, and in rare instances, suicide. |