The long-term treatment of panic disorder.
Panic disorder is a chronic and recurring condition, and there is therefore a need for long-term therapy. This paper reviews data from long-term studies of drug treatment for panic disorder to address issues of whether medication benefits persist, whether improvement can continue over several months or years, the tolerability of long-term treatment, patient selection for long-term treatment, and when and how to stop medication. The main conclusion is that long-term drug treatment of panic disorder is necessary, effective, and safe. Serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors offer benefits of ease of dosing, good tolerability, and no safety or dependence problems; TCAs are often poorly tolerated, and benzodiazepines are associated with dependence problems. Withdrawal from all types of medication should be considered, slow, planned, and individualized; some patients require an indefinite duration of treatment.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Treatment Outcome
- Relaxation Therapy
- Recurrence
- Psychiatry
- Paroxetine
- Panic Disorder
- Long-Term Care
- Humans
- Follow-Up Studies
- Drug Administration Schedule
Citation
Published In
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Treatment Outcome
- Relaxation Therapy
- Recurrence
- Psychiatry
- Paroxetine
- Panic Disorder
- Long-Term Care
- Humans
- Follow-Up Studies
- Drug Administration Schedule