Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
909387 Journal of Anxiety Disorders 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examine effects of hyperventilation in children with separation anxiety disorder.•They did not react with increased anxiety or panic symptoms or slowed recovery.•Nonetheless, they showed signs of difficulty in voluntary breathing regulation.•The mechanism may contribute to the development of panic disorder in adulthood.

BackgroundBiological theories on respiratory regulation have linked separation anxiety disorder (SAD) to panic disorder (PD). We tested if SAD children show similarly increased anxious and psychophysiological responding to voluntary hyperventilation and compromised recovery thereafter as has been observed in PD patients.MethodsParticipants were 49 children (5–14 years old) with SAD, 21 clinical controls with other anxiety disorders, and 39 healthy controls. We assessed cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic, respiratory (including pCO2), electrodermal, electromyographic, and self-report variables during baseline, paced hyperventilation, and recovery.ResultsSAD children did not react with increased anxiety or panic symptoms and did not show signs of slowed recovery. However, during hyperventilation they exhibited elevated reactivity in respiratory variability, heart rate, and musculus corrugator supercilii activity indicating difficulty with respiratory regulation.ConclusionsReactions to hyperventilation are much less pronounced in children with SAD than in PD patients. SAD children showed voluntary breathing regulation deficits.

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