Panic Disorder

Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent, unexpected panic attacks — intense surges of overwhelming fear and physical sensation that reach their peak within minutes — combined with persistent worry about the occurrence of future attacks and si…

Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent, unexpected panic attacks — intense surges of overwhelming fear and physical sensation that reach their peak within minutes — combined with persistent worry about the occurrence of future attacks and si…

Understanding Panic Disorder

Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent, unexpected panic attacks — intense surges of overwhelming fear and physical sensation that reach their peak within minutes — combined with persistent worry about the occurrence of future attacks and significant behavioral changes made in an effort to prevent or escape them. What distinguishes panic disorder from experiencing the occasional panic attack is the persistent anticipatory anxiety and the avoidance behavior that panic disorder generates. The fear is not just of the situations associated with panic, but of the panic itself — and this fear of fear creates a self-sustaining cycle that, without treatment, tends to narrow a person's world progressively over time.

Panic disorder is far more common than most people realize, affecting a meaningful percentage of adults at some point in their lives. It is also one of the most treatable anxiety disorders, with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy producing substantial and lasting improvement in the large majority of people who engage in treatment. The experience of panic disorder — frightening, confusing, and often embarrassing — does not have to be a permanent feature of your life.

Symptoms We Treat

Panic attacks in panic disorder involve a cluster of intense physical sensations — racing or pounding heart, shortness of breath, chest tightness or pain, dizziness or lightheadedness, numbness or tingling, sweating, shaking, and a sense of unreality or depersonalization — accompanied by intense fear and often by catastrophic misinterpretation of these sensations. People in the midst of panic attacks commonly believe they are having a heart attack, losing control, or dying, even when medically the physical sensations are entirely benign responses to an activated nervous system. This catastrophic misinterpretation is not irrational given how alarming panic symptoms feel — but it is the cognitive component that transforms a temporary physical experience into a frightening disorder.

Beyond the panic attacks themselves, panic disorder typically produces significant anticipatory anxiety — a persistent, background-level dread of the next attack — and avoidance behavior. People with panic disorder avoid places where they have previously had attacks, places where escape would be difficult if an attack occurred, and situations where physical symptoms of anxiety might be noticed or embarrassing. This avoidance, while temporarily comforting, progressively restricts life and can develop into agoraphobia if not addressed.

Our Therapeutic Approach

CBT for panic disorder is among the most effective and well-researched psychotherapy protocols available in the field, producing clinically significant improvement in approximately 80 to 90 percent of clients who complete treatment. Treatment at LC Psych begins with psychoeducation about the panic cycle — a clear, accurate explanation of how panic attacks work physically, why they feel so frightening, and why the catastrophic interpretation is inaccurate. This psychoeducation alone often reduces panic frequency for some clients by disrupting the fear-of-fear cycle at the cognitive level.

Cognitive restructuring specifically targets the catastrophic misinterpretations that transform physical arousal into panic — helping clients develop more accurate and realistic appraisals of physical sensations. Interoceptive exposure is a particularly important and powerful component of panic disorder treatment: by deliberately inducing the physical sensations associated with panic (through exercises such as spinning, breathing through a narrow straw, or running in place), clients learn at a visceral level that these sensations are not dangerous, breaking the conditioned fear of bodily arousal that drives panic disorder. Situational exposure addresses the avoidance patterns that panic disorder creates, progressively reengaging with avoided places and activities.

What to Expect in Sessions

Panic disorder treatment at LC Psych follows a structured, progressive protocol. The first two to three sessions focus on assessment, psychoeducation, and the introduction of breathing and grounding techniques. Subsequent sessions introduce cognitive restructuring of catastrophic interpretations, beginning interoceptive exposure exercises, and systematic situational exposure to avoided triggers. Sessions are typically active and skill-focused, with between-session practice forming an essential part of the treatment.

Most clients with panic disorder experience significant improvement within 10 to 15 sessions, often noticing meaningful reductions in panic frequency and anticipatory anxiety within the first month of active treatment. Your therapist will monitor your progress closely, adjust the pace and content of exposures based on your response, and ensure that you are building genuine skills — not just getting through sessions. The goal is a life in which panic has been genuinely defused, not merely managed day to day.

Getting Started at LC Psych

Panic disorder is highly treatable and you do not have to keep managing it alone. The experienced clinicians at LC Psych are ready to help you break the panic cycle and expand your world back to its full size. To schedule an appointment, call 859-525-4911 or visit lcpsych.com. Relief from panic is genuinely within reach.

Therapists Treating Panic Disorder

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