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Home » Suicide

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 30 No. 2
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Panic Attacks and Suicide

By Arline Kaplan | February 12, 2013

The authors speculated that those catastrophic cognitions activated suicidal ideation and interacted with high limbic activation (the flight-or-fight response) to lead to suicide attempts.

In their recent prospective study, Yaseen and colleagues1 examined the relationship between panic attacks, panic symptoms, and suicidality in individuals who met DSM-IV criteria for past-year major depressive episodes. They looked at NESARC data from 2001-2002 (wave 1) and NESARC data from 2004-2005 (wave 2).

Analyzing data on 2864 participants in the survey’s wave 1 and 2 who had depressive disorders, the authors found that past-year panic attacks in wave 1 significantly increased the odds for subsequent suicide ideation and attempt in the 3-year follow-up interval.

But “not all panic attacks are created equal,” Yaseen cautioned. In multivariate analyses, the researchers found that panic attacks were not a significant predictor but that panic attacks featuring fear of dying were. Among depressed individuals with panic attacks, fear of dying during such an attack increased the odds of a subsequent suicide attempt 7-fold, even after controlling for comorbid psychiatric conditions, pertinent demographic factors, and other panic attack symptoms.

Clinical implications

In their article, Yaseen and colleagues noted that more than half of persons suffering from a psychiatric disorder seek medical care in the month before making a suicide attempt.9 Of those, only 5% report thoughts of suicide at the time.9

“Identifying characteristic symptoms that are strongly associated with future suicide attempts would have clinical utility,” they wrote.

Yaseen recommends that patients who present to emergency departments with panic symptoms be screened for a mood disorder and suicidality and referred to appropriate psychiatric or psychological help if warranted.

“It is not enough to just reassure them that they were having a panic attack and not a heart attack,” he said. Conversely, “if someone is being treated for major depression or bipolar disorder, even if the patient is not reporting active suicidal ideation, we think it is important for clinicians to ask about panic attacks and pay particular attention to what panic symptoms the patient has, because those symptoms can be a significant warning sign that trouble is brewing.”

Yaseen added that he, Galynker, and others recently authored an open access article about the use in a psychiatric emergency room of a revised version of the Suicide Trigger Scale (STS-3), a 42-item scale designed to measure a panic-like psychopathological state.10 Galynker uses the scale in his clinical practice but also questions patients about their panic symptoms and asks them what the panic feels like. If it is associated with the fear of death, he said, then the patient is “more likely to commit suicide, because death is already in their consciousness.”

Galynker said he considers hospitalizing depressed patients who have made a previous suicide attempt or are experiencing a crisis and are expressing a fear of death.

“On the other hand, if someone has panic attacks and has had depression in the past, but their life is stable at the moment . . . I explain to them that suicidal urges may happen to them,” he said.

He describes what that urge might feel like and asks them to contact him or a psychiatric emergency department if it occurs. He explains that however horrible they feel at the time, the panic attack is going to go away and they are going to be feeling better.

Galynker is excited about the promise of this “new line of research.” In his career, he has seen some 25,000 patients, 7 of whom have killed themselves.

“A patient suicide is a very traumatic event for a psychiatrist. I remember vividly my last directions to these patients. Like nearly every psychiatrist, I questioned whether there was anything I could have identified or done differently,” he said.

Those experiences coupled with a desire to know what happens in a person’s mind before he or she actually commits suicide, he said, propelled him into this research.

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by Daniel Reidenberg | February 25, 2013 12:57 PM EST

I am submitting a comment regarding the article in the current issue Panic Attacks and Suicide. I read the quote "Suicide is an epidemic" according to Igor Galynker, MD, PhD. and would respectfully submit that this is not only inaccurate, but it is potentially dangerous.

First, suicide is a behavior. It is not a diagnosis nor it is an epidemic. It never has been nor is classified by epidemiologists. True numbers of deaths and rates have increased, but never to officially be classified as an epidemic (here or anywhere) from a statistical standpoint.

Second, research from more than 50 studies worldwide show that there is risk of contagion from how suicide is presented by the media. While Psychiatric Times is a trade publication, it nonetheless falls under that and having someone such as Dr. Galynker, an esteemed professional held in high regard state the same, is cause for concern, in particular if that comment is picked up on by traditional media or others who might not know the facts. Rather than putting out a sensationalistic message that isn't backed by facts, it would be more helpful to have accurate information, messages of hope, treatment, recovery and success. The message the well-intended Doctor gave does nothing to help us more accurately address the tragedy of suicide.

Respectfully submitted,

Daniel J. Reidenberg, Psy.D., FAPA, BCPC, CMT, CRS, DAPA
Executive Director - Suicide Awareness Voices of Education
Managing Director - National Council for Suicide Prevention
US Representative - International Association for Suicide Prevention

by The Editors | February 27, 2013 11:14 AM EST

The following comment is on behalf of Igor Galynker, MD, PhD, in response to Daniel Reidenberg:

The term epidemic was meant figuratively as a medical event which is increasing in frequency and is not put under control. Another example would be an epidemic of using stimulants as performance-enhancing drugs during finals by college students. Terms used figuratively sometimes are put in quotation marks but often are not and their meaning could be understood from the context. I believe in this case quotation marks were unnecessary as professional readers would know that suicide is not a disease transmitted by microbiological pathogens - viruses, bacteria, prions, etc.





References

1. Yaseen ZS, Chartrand H, Mojtabai R, et al. Fear of dying in panic attacks predicts suicide attempt in comorbid depressive illness: prospective evidence from the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions. Depress Anxiety. 2012 Dec 20; [Epub ahead of print].

2. Bolton JM, Pagura J, Enns MW, et al. A population-based longitudinal study of risk factors for suicide attempts in major depressive disorder. J Psychiatr Res. 2010;44:817-826.

3. Bolton JM, Cox BJ, Afifi TO, et al. Anxiety disorders and risk for suicide attempts: findings from the Baltimore Epidemiologic Catchment area follow-up study. Depress Anxiety. 2008;25:477-481.

4. Sareen J, Cox BJ, Afifi TO, et al. Anxiety disorders and risk for suicidal ideation and suicide attempts: a population-based longitudinal study of adults. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2005;62:1249-1257.

5. Hendin H, Al Jurdi RK, Houck PR, et al. Evidence for significant improvement in prediction of acute risk for suicidal behavior. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2010;198:604-605.

6. Fawcett J. Diagnosis, traits, states, and comorbidity in suicide. In: Dwivedi Y, ed. The Neurobiological Basis of Suicide. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press; 2012:chap 1.

7. Deisenhammer EA, Ing CM, Strauss R, et al. The duration of the suicidal process: how much time is left for intervention between consideration and accomplishment of a suicide attempt? J Clin Psychiatry. 2009;70:19-24.

8. Katz C, Yaseen ZS, Mojtabai R, et al. Panic as an independent risk factor for suicide attempt in depressive illness: findings from the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC). J Clin Psychiatry. 2011;72:1628-1635.

9. Matthews K, Milne S, Ashcroft GW. Role of doctors in the prevention of suicide: the final consultation. Br J Gen Pract. 1994;44:345-348.

10. Yaseen ZS, Gilmer E, Modi J, et al. Emergency room validation of the revised Suicide Trigger Scale (STS-3): a measure of a hypothesized suicide trigger state. PLoS One. 2012;7(9):e45157. http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0045157.


 
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