Jg. Beck et al., Exaggerated anxiety is not unique to CO2 in panic disorder: A comparison of hypercapnic and hypoxic challenges, J ABN PSYCH, 108(3), 1999, pp. 473-482
Current biological models of panic disorder (PD) assert that this disorder
is maintained by hypersensitivity to carbon dioxide (CO2) and related asphy
xia cues, which is manifested as an exaggerated suffocation alarm (D. Klein
, 1993). Because suffocation can result from both increased CO2 (hypercapni
a) and decreased oxygen (O-2; hypoxia), this study examined respiratory res
ponding and anxiety during 5% CO2 (a hypercapnic challenge) and 12% O-2 (a
hypoxic challenge) in 14 PD patients and 14 matched controls (MC). Results
demonstrate that irrespective of the source of suffocation, PD patients res
pond with increased anxiety relative to MC participants. Significant group
differences were observed in respiratory functioning, with the PD patients
showing higher respiratory rates in response to both challenges. The MC sam
ple demonstrated the expected respiratory responses to both hypercapnia and
hypoxia. The findings indicate that PD patients are hypersensitive to alte
rations in breathing and that this reactivity is not specific to CO2.