Join dLife Today!
Get a Free A1C Home Test. Plus, get free recipes, newsletters, savings, and so much more! Membership is FREE!

Add to Google

Add to My AOL



Panic Attacks Can Increase Complications in Diabetes Patients

November 17, 2006

Digg This! | Send to Newsvine | Add to del.icio.us

November 17, 2006 (Newswise) — People with diabetes who have repeated panic attacks are less likely to have properly managed the disease and suffer more severe health complications and poorer quality of life, a new study finds.

Lead author Evette Ludman, Ph.D., a researcher with Group Health Cooperative in Seattle, said her group’s previous work showed depression was associated with more poorly controlled glucose, more diabetes symptom, and lower functioning. “But because panic and depression so often go hand in hand, we weren’t certain that patients who have panic, independent of depression, would also have with these indicators.”

For the new study, which appears in the November issue of General Hospital Psychiatry, a survey was mailed to 4,385 patients with diabetes. Of those participants, 193 (4.4 percent) reported having panic episodes that caused a definite change in behavior. Among the 193 patients, 54.5 percent also had symptoms of depression.

Respondents were asked about recent panic or fear “spells” and if these feelings forced them to change their behavior. Participants were also given questionnaires that measured their diabetes symptoms as well as their level of functioning and disability.

Of those with panic disorder, the average HbA1c levels — a measure of long-term glucose control — were 8.1 percent compared with 7.7 percent for those without panic episodes. (Usual treatment goal is to keep levels below 7 percent.) Also, those with panic episodes reported having an average of 4.2 diabetes symptoms compared with 2.4 symptoms in those without panic.

Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent panic attacks, followed by persistent worry about having another attack.

The authors say that panic symptoms might be a consequence of diabetes itself. Panic episodes may contribute to poor outcomes by interfering with self-care and patients’ ability to follow their treatment regimens.

The authors and diabetes experts agree that if physicians treating patients with diabetes can better recognize and treat the symptoms of panic episodes and depression, they can improve the patients’ quality of life.

“I think most careful clinicians have noted that there are patients who do not cope well with their diabetes and have a variety of neuropsychosocial issues including panic disorder, depression, anxiety and personality disorders,” said John Buse, M.D., division chief of the Diabetes Center at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “The key really is to very carefully assess patients who are not doing well in their management of diabetes or other chronic illness.”

Posted by dlife at November 17, 2006 11:44 AM

Comments

I agree with Cheryl,It seems that when my sugar is High, I sense a more feeling of losing control,going crazy, unglued, It seems this panic disorder is antagonized by high sugar and in some cases when sugar is low. I believe I have been increasing anti anxiety meds, when sugar was playing a bigger role. As I excercise, two things happen, sugar drops, gets burned up, endorphens go into my system, and I feel like a champ, its like Ive never had any complication, the more I work out, the more I eat right,the more I eat the right amount & at the right time, the better I feel. It is complicated, but I'm sure I can manage it. I believe I have been dealing with blood sugar a long time ago, thinking that it was all anxiety.

Posted by: Ed at August 29, 2007 01:16 AM

I have both diabetes and a panic disorder. I have found at times that the panic can be ever more increased in feeling when I have high sugar... which then in turn brings on a more intensified feeling of panic. I often times am afraid to go to sleep for fear of never waking. Is this normal? And what measures can be taken to not feel this way. Cheryl

Posted by: Cheryl Farley at April 17, 2007 01:02 AM

Post a comment




Remember Me?