Panic Disorder Care

Compassionate Evaluation & Evidence-Based Treatment for Panic Attacks

Panic disorder is more than anxiety — it involves sudden, intense episodes of fear that often feel physical, overwhelming, and impossible to control. These episodes, known as panic attacks, can be so frightening that many people fear they are dying, fainting, or having a medical emergency.

At Arizona Mental Wellness, our psychiatric team provides comprehensive evaluation, medication support, and evidence-based strategies to help you understand your symptoms, regulate your nervous system, and feel safe in your body again.

Panic disorder is highly treatable — and you don’t have to live in fear of the next attack.

What Is Panic Disorder?

Panic disorder occurs when someone experiences:

  • Ongoing physical or emotional distress
  • Recurrent, unexpected panic attacks
  • Persistent worry about future attacks
  • Avoidance of places, sensations, or situations

Compassionate Expert Support

Panic attacks are real physiological events driven by a sudden surge of adrenaline — not weakness or overreaction.

Many clients describe episodes as:

  • “I feel something terrible is about to happen.”
  • “I feel like I’m dying.”
  • “I can’t breathe.”
  • “I’m losing control.”

Psychiatric care helps interrupt the cycle and restore confidence.

Common Symptoms of Panic Attacks

Physical Symptoms

  • Feeling “out of body” or detached
  • Chest pressure or pain
  • Shortness of breath
  • Dizziness or lightheadedness
  • Racing or pounding heart
  • Shaking or trembling
  • Hot or cold flashes
  • Nausea
  • Tingling in hands or face

Cognitive/Emotional Symptoms

  • Fear of the next attack
  • Fear of dying
  • Fear of fainting
  • Fear of losing control
  • Catastrophic thinking

Even though panic attacks feel dangerous, they are treatable and manageable.

Experience a supportive approach tailored to your unique needs, fostering hope and stability throughout recovery.

Medication Options for Panic Disorder

 
Medication can significantly reduce the frequency and intensity of panic attacks, helping you regain emotional and physical stability.

SSRIs (First-line Treatment)

Regulate serotonin pathways involved in panic:
 
Sertraline
Escitalopram
Paroxetine
Fluoxetine
Citalopram
 
These are the safest, most evidence-based long-term treatments.

SNRIs (Alternative First-Line)

Regulate both serotonin and norepinephrine:
 
Venlafaxine XR
Duloxetine
 
Helpful when panic includes strong physical symptoms.

Benzodiazepines (Short-term, Situational Only)

Used cautiously and temporarily:
 
Lorazepam
Clonazepam
Alprazolam (less preferred)
 
Not recommended for long-term treatment due to dependence risk

 Beta-Blockers

Reduce physical panic symptoms:

  • Rapid heart rate
  • Trembling
  • Adrenaline surges

Helpful for performance-related or situational panic.

Adjunctive Medications

For complex or resistant cases:

  • Sleep-supportive medications
  • Nervous system regulators
  • Agents that target hyperarousal

Medication decisions are collaborative, based on safety and symptom pattern.

Psychiatric Evaluation for Panic Disorder

Your psychiatrist will assess:

Evaluation helps determine whether symptoms reflect panic disorder, another anxiety condition, or a medical issue..

How Psychiatry Helps Beyond Medication

We support recovery by helping you:

  • Understand the physiology of panic
  • Break the fear-of-fear cycle
  • Reduce catastrophic thoughts
  • Recognize early warning signs
  • Rebuild trust in bodily sensations
  • Restore sleep and energy
  • Address trauma-related patterns
  • Stabilize co-occurring anxiety disorders
  • Create a personalized coping plan

These foundations make treatment both faster and more long-lasting.

Support for Neurodivergent Clients

Panic disorder often co-occurs with:

Our neurodiversity-affirming approach considers:

  • Sensory triggers
  • Executive functioning patterns
  • Fight/flight reactivity
  • Internal communication differences
  • Interoceptive challenges

We meet you exactly where you are.

When to Seek Psychiatric Support

You may benefit from care if you experience:

  • Sudden, intense panic attacks
  • Fear of having another attack
  • Avoidance of driving, crowds, or public places
  • Sleep disruption from anxiety
  • Feeling unsafe in your body
  • Depersonalization or derealization
  • Panic that seems “medical” in nature
  • Panic connected to trauma
  • Worsening symptoms despite coping efforts

There is no wrong time to seek help.

Discover Effective Panic Disorder Care

You Can Recover From Panic Disorder

Panic disorder is one of the most treatable anxiety conditions.

With the right psychiatric support, many clients experience rapid improvement — and some achieve full remission.

You deserve calm, confidence, and peace in your daily life.

Q: How can a psychiatric provider help with panic disorder?

A: A psychiatric provider evaluates your panic symptoms, identifies triggers, rules out medical causes, and creates an individualized treatment plan. This may include medication, nervous-system regulation strategies, and support for co-occurring conditions like anxiety or insomnia.

Q: What medications are used to treat panic disorder?

A: SSRIs and SNRIs are the primary long-term treatments for panic disorder. Short-term medications may be used briefly during the early phase of treatment. Your provider will tailor medication based on safety, symptoms, and personal history.

Q: Are panic attacks dangerous?

A: Panic attacks feel frightening but are not medically dangerous. However, they can significantly impact daily functioning. A psychiatric evaluation helps differentiate panic symptoms from medical conditions and provides relief strategies.

Q: How do I know if I have panic disorder?

A: Panic disorder involves recurring panic attacks paired with ongoing fear of future episodes or avoidance behaviors. A psychiatric provider can assess whether symptoms meet diagnostic criteria and recommend effective treatment.

Q: Is therapy recommended along with psychiatry for panic disorder?

A: Yes. While medication reduces physical and emotional intensity, therapy (such as CBT or exposure-based approaches) helps break the panic cycle. Combined treatment leads to the best long-term outcomes.