The corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation test in patients with panic disorder
Article 1986 en
Authors
PR
Peter Roy‐Byrne
TU
Thomas W. Uhde
RP
Robert M. Post
Abstract
1 min read
Eight patients with panic disorder had significantly lower ACTH and cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing hormone and a significantly lower ratio of ACTH to cortisol response than 30 normal control subjects. These responses resemble those previously reported for depressed patients except that they occurred in the face of significantly elevated basal cortisol and ACTH levels. These results suggest that patients with panic disorder have an element of chronic hypercortisolemia, like depressed patients, but also a more acute perturbation in ACTH secretion, not previously seen in depressed patients.
Philip W. Gold, D. Lynn Loriaux, Alec Roy, Mitchel A. Kling, Joseph R. Calabrese, Charles H. Kellner, Lynnette K. Nieman, Robert M. Post, David Pickar, William T. Gallucci, Peter C. Avgerinos, Steven M. Paul, Edward H. Oldfield, Gordon B. Cutler, George Chrousos
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