Carbon dioxide induced panic attacks and short term clonazepam treatment. Preliminary study.
Author(s): Nardi AE, Valenca AM, Zin W, Nascimento I
Affiliation(s): Laboratory of Panic and Respiration, Anxiety and Depression Research Program, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. aenardi@novanet.com.br
Publication date & source: 1999-06, Arq Neuropsiquiatr., 57(2B):361-5.
Publication type: Clinical Trial; Randomized Controlled Trial
AIMS: 1. To verify the sensibility of panic patients to a mixture of 35% CO2 and 65% O2. 2. To determine if a ten days treatment with clonazepam attenuates the panic attacks induced by the inhalation of 35% carbon dioxide in panic disorder. METHOD: We randomly selected six panic disorder subjects, using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. All subjects went double-blindly through an inhalation of 35% CO2 and compressed gas (atmospheric air) on two occasions. First, at baseline, when they were drug free. Second, after a 10 days clonazepam treatment. RESULTS: Neither at baseline nor after treatment any patient had a panic attack during compressed gas inhalation. At the first test five patients (83.3%) had a severe panic attack with high levels of subjective anxiety during carbon dioxide inhalation. After 9.6 (+/- 3.4) days of clonazepam treatment, only two (33.3%) patients experienced a mild panic attack. CONCLUSION: This pilot study suggests the efficacy of the short term clonazepam therapy in attenuating panic attacks and supports the usefulness of the 35% carbon dioxide challenge test as an analogue method for study the efficacy of anti-panic drugs. Further placebo-controlled studies to pharmacological treatment are warranted.
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