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Translational research for panic disorder

posted Monday, 4 August 2008

Am J Psychiatry 2008 Jul;165:796-798

Walton T. Roth, MD

In this issue of the Journal, Grillon et al. (1) report a possible psychophysiological marker of panic disorder. In their study, participants with a diagnosis of panic disorder and healthy comparison subjects were presented with colored geometric shapes (threat cues) that indicated whether and when a brief unpleasant stimulus (sounds or pictures) might be delivered. In one experimental condition, the aversive stimuli were predictable in that they were always delivered 7 seconds after the onset of a threat cue. In another condition, the aversive stimuli were unpredictable. Participants' fear level was assessed by the magnitude of eye-blink startle to puffs of air to the forehead. Results were that panic disorder patients and comparison subjects showed equal increases of startle from the experimental condition in which aversive sounds would never be given to the condition in which aversive sounds were given predictably. However, in the condition in which aversive sounds were given unpredictably, the increases were greater among panic disorder patients.

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© 2008 American Psychiatric Association

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