Publications by authors named "Akira Hanaoka"

Patients with panic disorder (PD) have a bias to respond to normal stimuli in a fearful way. This may be due to the preactivation of fear-associated networks prior to stimulus perception. Based on EEG, we investigated the difference between patients with PD and normal controls in resting state activity using features of transiently stable brain states (microstates).

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Power spectral analysis of electrocardiogram (ECG) R-R intervals is useful for the detection of autonomic dysfunction in various clinical disorders. Although both panic disorder (PD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) are known to have effects on the cardiac autonomic nervous system, no previous study has tested this among drug-naïve (i.e.

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The present study was performed to compare the clinical features of patients with panic disorder with and without agoraphobia. The subjects were 233 outpatients with panic disorder (99 males and 134 females) diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria. Sixty-three patients met the criteria for panic disorder without agoraphobia, and 170 met the criteria for panic disorder with agoraphobia.

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To investigate the functional abnormalities in the central nervous system (CNS) of patients with panic disorder (PD), we compared the electroencephalography (EEG) coherence values in 18 never-medicated PD patients with those in age-matched normal control subjects, and examined the relationships between EEG coherence values and both the duration of disease and the severity of panic attacks. EEG data were recorded in the resting state. The PD patients had lower coherence values with significant differences in F3-F4, C3-C4, P3-P4, F7-T5, and F8-T6.

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The aim of this study was to investigate correlations between thyroid function and severity of anxiety or panic attacks in patients with panic disorder. The authors examined 66 out-patients with panic disorder (medicated, n=41; non-medicated, n=25), and measured their free thriiodothyronine (T3), free thyroxine (T4) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. Significant correlations between the thyroid hormone levels and clinical features were observed in the non-medicated patients.

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