Your heart is racing. You can't breathe. You're convinced you're dying —
but it might be a panic attack, not a cardiac event.
India's most comprehensive clinical guide to panic disorder: what it is, how to tell it from a heart attack,
and how to treat it completely. Written by Dr. Akash Parihar, MD Psychiatrist, Kota.
A panic attack is not "just anxiety" — it has a precise clinical definition in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5-TR) APA 2022 ↗, which forms the basis for correct diagnosis and treatment. Understanding this definition helps patients recognise their experience and communicate it to doctors. Also: Anxiety Treatment Kota →
This is the question that sends thousands of Indian patients to cardiology wards annually, only to be told their heart is fine. The symptoms genuinely overlap — and misidentification works in both directions. Here is the clinical framework physicians use. Huffman et al., 2017 ↗
If you are experiencing chest pain for the first time, if you are over 40, if pain worsens with exertion, radiates to the left arm or jaw, or if you have cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes, hypertension, smoking, family history of heart disease) — go to an emergency department immediately for ECG and troponin testing. Do not self-diagnose as panic. The guidance below applies to patients who have already had cardiac causes excluded.
| Clinical Feature | 🔴 Panic Attack | 💚 Cardiac Event (ACS/MI) |
|---|---|---|
| Onset & Time Course | Peaks within 10 minutes. Usually resolves within 20–30 min. Abrupt "out of nowhere" onset. | Progressive over minutes to hours. Does not peak and resolve — tends to worsen or remain constant. |
| Chest Pain Character | Diffuse, pressure-like, non-specific. Not position-dependent. No radiation pattern. | Crushing, squeezing pressure. May radiate to left arm, jaw, neck, or back. Worsens with exertion. |
| Pain Radiation | No characteristic radiation. Chest tightness localised or diffuse. | Classic radiation to left arm, jaw, neck, shoulder — a red flag requiring immediate emergency assessment. |
| Effect of Exercise | Panic attacks can occur at rest or even wake patients from sleep. Physical activity may reduce panic over time. | Angina/ACS is characteristically provoked or worsened by exertion and relieved by rest or nitroglycerin. |
| Breathing | Hyperventilation common — drives carbon dioxide down, causing dizziness, tingling, and worsening panic (the panic cycle). | Breathlessness due to reduced cardiac output. May cause pulmonary oedema in severe MI. |
| Associated Fear/Cognition | Intense fear of dying or "going crazy". Catastrophic interpretation of physical symptoms is a core feature — and amplifies symptoms. | Fear present but does not have the derealisation / depersonalisation / "going mad" quality of panic. |
| Diaphoresis (Sweating) | Cold, clammy sweat. Associated with anxiety. Resolves as attack passes. | Profuse, cold sweat — a classic "diaphoresis" sign of MI. Often described as "drenching." |
| Response to Reassurance | Often partially responds to calm reassurance and controlled breathing. Symptoms reduce as anxiety reduces. | Does not respond to psychological reassurance. Physical symptoms persist independently of mindset. |
| Prior Episodes | History of similar episodes, often in stressful contexts. Patient may identify triggers or patterns. | May have history of angina or risk factors, but MI symptoms are typically novel in intensity. |
| ECG Findings | Normal ECG (or sinus tachycardia only). No ischaemic changes, no ST elevation/depression. | ST elevation, T-wave changes, new LBBB, Q-waves — ECG is the definitive emergency investigation. |
| Troponin / Enzymes | Troponin is normal. Cardiac biomarkers are not elevated. | Elevated troponin I/T — the definitive biomarker for myocardial injury. Serial troponins over 3–6 hours are diagnostic. |
| Age / Risk Profile | Peaks in 20s–30s. Common in young adults, students, high-stress individuals. Not age-restricted. | Risk increases significantly above 40. Associated with hypertension, diabetes, smoking, family history, dyslipidaemia. |
| Definitive Confirmation | Psychiatric assessment using DSM-5 criteria after cardiac exclusion. Clinical history and validated tools (PDSS, APPQ). | ECG + Troponin + clinical assessment in emergency department. Angiography if indicated. |
Not all panic presentations are the same clinical entity. Treatment approach, prognosis, and medication selection differ based on the specific subtype. Correct classification requires psychiatric assessment.
Recurrent panic attacks with no identifiable trigger — occurring "out of the blue," often waking the patient from sleep. The hallmark of full panic disorder. After the first attack, patients develop persistent anticipatory anxiety about the next.
Most common in young adults (onset typically 20s). Most strongly responsive to CBT + SSRI combination. 85–90% response rate with appropriate treatment. Barlow 2000 ↗
Panic attacks that are reliably triggered by specific situations — crowded spaces, examinations, public speaking, elevators, or other phobic stimuli. Often part of a broader anxiety or phobia diagnosis.
In Kota's coaching students, exam hall panic attacks are a common variant of this subtype. Situational exposure therapy (gradual, structured) is highly effective. Exam Stress Guide →
When panic disorder is left untreated, patients frequently develop agoraphobia — avoidance of situations where escape might be difficult or help unavailable during an attack. Classically: public transport, markets, open spaces, or leaving home alone.
Agoraphobia is a complication of untreated panic — emphasising the importance of early intervention. Treatment requires combined exposure therapy and pharmacotherapy.
Panic attacks that wake the patient from sleep — not nightmares, but full DSM-5 panic attacks occurring during non-REM sleep, usually between midnight and 4 AM. Particularly alarming as the patient is immediately in a state of acute panic.
More common in Kota's sleep-deprived coaching students. Strongly associated with chronic sleep restriction, caffeine excess, and underlying generalised anxiety. Student Mental Health →
Kota's competitive coaching environment creates a near-perfect confluence of known panic disorder risk factors. This is not weakness or character failure — it is a predictable neurobiological outcome of specific environmental pressures. Bandelow 2021 · World J Psychiatry ↗
Multiple cups of chai and energy drinks are a Kota coaching cultural norm. Caffeine is a direct pharmacological trigger for panic attacks — it antagonises adenosine receptors and elevates cortisol, directly mimicking and amplifying panic physiology. A 2022 meta-analysis confirmed caffeine dose-dependently increases panic attack frequency. Mackus 2022 ↗
40% of Kota students sleep under 6 hours nightly. Sleep restriction increases amygdala reactivity by 60% and impairs prefrontal cortex regulation of the threat response — the neuroanatomical substrate of panic. Walker 2007 · Current Biology ↗ Sleep + Stress Guide →
Chronic anxiety causes subtle over-breathing (hyperventilation) that lowers blood CO₂ — directly producing dizziness, tingling, and cognitive impairment that feeds back into panic. This mechanism is why panic attacks often occur in exam halls even without overt panic triggers. Clark 1986 ↗
The cognitive style reinforced by Kota's rank-obsessed culture — "everything depends on this result" — is the same cognitive distortion (catastrophisation) that drives panic disorder. David Clark's (1986) cognitive model shows that panic is fundamentally a disorder of catastrophic misinterpretation of body sensations. Student Mental Health →
83% of Kota coaching students live in hostels away from family. Research by Holt-Lunstad et al. (2015) confirms social isolation significantly elevates HPA-axis reactivity — the physiological system that mediates panic. The inability to speak openly about physical symptoms amplifies catastrophic misinterpretation.
Most students experiencing their first panic attack have never been educated about panic disorder. Without the framework "this is a panic attack — I am not dying," the experience becomes profoundly traumatising and directly establishes the anticipatory anxiety cycle that maintains the disorder. Online Consultation →
Panic disorder has one of the highest treatment response rates in all of psychiatry. With proper evidence-based care, 85–90% of patients achieve significant symptom reduction within 8–12 weeks. The following treatments are supported by Cochrane-level meta-analytic evidence.
The gold-standard first-line treatment for panic disorder. Panic-focused CBT (PFCBT), developed by Clark and Barlow, achieves response rates of 85–90% in RCTs — superior to medication alone. Barlow 2000 ↗
CBT targets the catastrophic misinterpretation of body sensations — the cognitive engine of panic. Patients learn that the racing heart and shortness of breath are physiologically harmless, and this cognitive restructuring breaks the panic cycle permanently.
Typical course: 8–12 structured weekly sessions. Gains are maintained at 2-year follow-up in 75–80% of patients.
First-line medication for panic disorder when severity is moderate-to-severe or when CBT response is insufficient alone. SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) are recommended by NICE, APA, and WHO. NICE CG113 ↗
First-line agents: escitalopram, sertraline, paroxetine (all FDA/DCGI approved for panic disorder). Onset of anti-panic effect: 4–6 weeks. Full effect: 8–12 weeks. Dose must be started low and titrated to minimise initial jitteriness.
Critical prescription note: SSRIs should never be initiated at full dose in panic disorder — the initial activating effects can temporarily worsen panic in the first 1–2 weeks.
Immediate, session-one intervention. Diaphragmatic breathing retraining corrects the hyperventilation cycle that drives physical panic symptoms. By restoring normal CO₂ levels, it directly reduces dizziness, tingling, and chest tightness within minutes. Ley 1993 ↗
The 4-7-8 technique and paced diaphragmatic breathing (6 breaths/minute) are clinically validated. Unlike benzodiazepines, these have no tolerance, no withdrawal, and can be used anywhere including exam halls.
Try the interactive breathing tool in the section below ↓
A CBT technique specific to panic disorder that involves deliberately inducing panic-like body sensations (spinning, breathing through a straw, stair-climbing) in a controlled clinical setting. Bouton 2001 ↗
By experiencing these sensations without catastrophe, patients learn at a visceral level that "these sensations are harmless." This extinguishes the conditioned fear response. Highly effective for patients whose panic is driven by physical sensation triggers.
Specific lifestyle changes with direct clinical evidence for panic disorder reduction: caffeine elimination (reduces panic attacks in caffeine-sensitive patients within 2 weeks); aerobic exercise (30 min/day reduces panic frequency by 26%); sleep regularisation (restores amygdala homeostasis). Ströhle 2009 ↗
These are not replacements for clinical treatment but powerful adjuncts. In mild panic presentations, lifestyle modification alone can achieve remission. For Kota students, caffeine reduction is the most immediately impactful change.
Avoid benzodiazepines (alprazolam, clonazepam) as first-line treatment. While they reduce acute panic symptoms rapidly, they carry high risks of dependence, tolerance, and rebound anxiety — and they do not address the underlying cognitive mechanisms of panic. Otto 2003 ↗
Many Indian patients arrive at Dr. Akash Parihar's clinic dependent on benzodiazepines prescribed without concurrent CBT — a situation that requires careful tapering while initiating proper evidence-based treatment. Early CBT prevents this outcome entirely.
Online Consult → Best Psychiatrist Kota →
CBT targets Step 2 (cognitive restructuring) and uses interoceptive exposure to desensitise Step 1. Breaking either link permanently disrupts the cycle.
Developed from pranayama and validated in clinical anxiety research. Activates the parasympathetic nervous system within 90 seconds. Use this during an attack or in the exam hall. Press the circle to begin.
Clinical reference: Ley (1993), Hyperventilation and Panic — Behav Res Ther ↗
Select the symptoms you experienced during your most recent episode. This is a clinical screening tool — not a diagnosis. A score of 4+ warrants psychiatric evaluation. If you had chest pain + radiation to arm/jaw → go to ER immediately, do not use this tool.
Select all that apply. Based on DSM-5 panic attack criteria.
Panic disorder often coexists with other conditions. Each page below provides the same depth of clinical information.
Every clinical claim on this page is supported by peer-reviewed evidence. The following are the primary research papers referenced — linked directly to PubMed, journals, and guidelines bodies.