Advertisement
Brief report| Volume 33, ISSUE 4, P295-297, February 15, 1993

Download started.

Ok

Panic attacks induced by doxapram

      This paper is only available as a PDF. To read, Please Download here.
      To read this article in full you will need to make a payment

      Purchase one-time access:

      Academic & Personal: 24 hour online accessCorporate R&D Professionals: 24 hour online access
      One-time access price info
      • For academic or personal research use, select 'Academic and Personal'
      • For corporate R&D use, select 'Corporate R&D Professionals'

      Subscribe:

      Subscribe to Biological Psychiatry
      Already a print subscriber? Claim online access
      Already an online subscriber? Sign in
      Institutional Access: Sign in to ScienceDirect

      References

        • Calverley P.M.A.
        • Robson R.H.
        • Wraith P.K.
        • Prescott L.F.
        • Flenley D.C.
        The ventilatory effects of doxapram in normal man.
        Clin Sci. 1983; 65: 65-69
        • Gorman J.M.
        • Askanazi J.
        • Liebowitz M.R.
        • et al.
        Response to hyperventilation in a group of patients with panic disorder.
        Am J Psychiatry. 1984; 141: 857-861
        • Gorman J.M.
        • Cohen B.S.
        • Liebowitz M.R.
        • et al.
        Blood gas changes and hypophosphatemia in lactate-induced panic.
        Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1986; 43: 1067-1071
        • Kato H.
        • Buckley J.P.
        Possible sites of action of the respiratory stimulant effect of doxapram hydrochloride.
        J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1964; 144: 262-264
      1. Klein DF (in press): False suffocation alarms and spontaneous panics: Subsuming the CO2 hypersensitivity theory. Arch Gen Psychiatry.

        • Woods S.W.
        • Charney D.S.
        • Goodman W.K.
        Carbon dioxide-induced anxiety.
        Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1988; 45: 43-52