Panic Disorder: Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment & Recovery
Understand panic disorder, recurrent panic attacks, treatment options,
recovery strategies, and how to find confidential professional support.

What Is Panic Disorder?
Panic disorder is a mental health condition marked by recurrent unexpected panic attacks and persistent fear of future attacks. It is highly treatable with therapy, medication, and professional support.
Highly Treatable
Affects Millions
Evidence-Based Therapies
Recovery Is Possible
What Is Panic Disorder?
Panic disorder is a DSM-5 anxiety disorder defined by recurrent, unexpected panic attacks — sudden surges of intense fear or discomfort that peak within minutes — and at least one month of persistent worry about future attacks or significant change in behavior to avoid them. Panic disorder is treatable, and most people respond well to evidence-based care.
Panic disorder typically begins in late adolescence or early adulthood and often co-occurs with depression, agoraphobia, and substance use disorders. Early treatment significantly improves long-term outcomes.
Panic Disorder vs Panic Attacks
| Feature | Panic Attacks | Panic Disorder |
|---|---|---|
| Frequency | Isolated or rare attacks | Recurrent, unexpected attacks |
| Fear of future attacks | Usually minimal | Persistent worry between attacks |
| Behavior change | Limited | Avoidance, life narrowing |
| Diagnosis | Symptom, not a disorder | DSM-5 diagnosis |
| Treatment | Often resolves on its own | CBT, medication, structured care |
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Symptoms of Panic Disorder
Anxiety shows up across four dimensions. Most people experience symptoms in more than one category.
Physical Symptoms
Emotional & Cognitive Symptoms
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Causes of Panic Disorder
Genetics
Family history significantly raises risk for panic disorder.
Brain Chemistry
Differences in fear-circuit and neurotransmitter regulation contribute.
Psychological Factors
Anxious temperament, trauma, and learned threat responses play a role.
Environmental Stress
Major life transitions, loss, and chronic stress can trigger onset.
Panic Disorder & Agoraphobia
Agoraphobia is fear and avoidance of places or situations where escape might be difficult or help unavailable during a panic attack. Over time, the world can shrink — first crowded spaces, then travel, then leaving home alone. Agoraphobia is highly treatable with graduated exposure and CBT, often alongside medication.
Common Avoidance Behaviors
Panic Disorder vs Other Anxiety Disorders
| Disorder | Symptoms | Key Difference |
|---|---|---|
| Generalized Anxiety | Chronic, broad worry | Worry is sustained, not in attacks |
| PTSD | Trauma-driven fear, flashbacks | Triggered by trauma reminders |
| OCD | Obsessions and compulsions | Distress driven by intrusive thoughts |
| Social Anxiety | Fear of judgment in social settings | Situation-specific, not unexpected |
| Agoraphobia | Fear of escape-limited places | Often follows panic disorder |
How Panic Disorder Is Diagnosed
Evidence-Based Treatment Options
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
First-line treatment. Targets catastrophic thinking and uses interoceptive exposure to reduce fear of bodily sensations.
Medication Management
SSRIs and SNRIs are first-line. Benzodiazepines may be used short-term under careful supervision.
Exposure Therapy
Graduated exposure to feared sensations and situations reduces avoidance and rebuilds confidence.
Lifestyle Interventions
Panic Disorder Is Treatable
Evidence-based care reduces symptoms and improves quality of life.
Panic Disorder & Substance Use
Many people with panic disorder turn to alcohol or drugs to dampen anxiety. Over time, substances worsen panic symptoms, disrupt sleep, and create dependence. When panic disorder and substance use occur together, integrated dual-diagnosis treatment is essential.
Conditions Often Seen Together
Co-Occurring Conditions
Depression
PTSD
OCD
Bipolar Disorder
Substance Use Disorder
Generalized Anxiety
Recovery & Long-Term Outlook
Can Panic Disorder Be Cured?
Recovery is possible. Many people experience significant symptom reduction or full remission with proper treatment, skill building, and ongoing self-care.
How to Help Someone With Panic Disorder
Do
Don’t
Treatment Options
Authoritative Resources
NIMH APA SAMHSA NAMI
This content is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. If you are in crisis, call or text 988.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about co-occurring disorders and integrated treatment.
Related Conditions & Resources
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