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1 From the Department of Respiratory Medicine and Academic Department of Psychological Medicine, King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry, London, UK.
We studied 23 consecutive patients with acute hyperventilation presenting to an inner-city emergency department, diagnosed on clinical grounds by the attending physician and confirmed by arterial blood gas values in 5 patients. An organic basis for the presenting complaints was excluded and chest radiograph, serum biochemistry, blood cell count, and thyroid function test results were normal. The male to female ratio was 12:11. Presenting complaints were dyspnea (61%), paresthesia (35%), chest pain or tightness (43%), muscle spasm (9%), dizziness (13%), palpitations (13%), and panic (30%). Similar previous episodes were reported in 74%. Misattribution of the presenting complaints to a cardiac or other life-threatening disorder was reported in 20 patients (87%) and was the main reason for their presentation to the hospital. Although no patients presented with clinical features of asthma, 7 (30%) were known asthmatics receiving treatment and another 10 (44%) had a history and investigation results suggestive of asthma. Only 2 had a history of anxiety or depression, but 17 (78%) patients exceeded the threshold for anxiety or panic on Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS-R) interview (score
12). Marihuana or alcohol abuse were involved in 17% with a history of past abuse in 26%. When assessed 2 months after the attack, 13 (57%) had resting or stressor-induced hyperventilation with a significant (p<0.05) association with asthma but not with a positive CIS-R score. These results illustrate the multifactorial basis of acute hyperventilation, the importance of misattribution, and the danger of using the term "hyperventilation syndrome" in the emergency department.
Key Words: anxiety carbon dioxide hyperventilation hypocapnia misattribution panic psychiatric disorder respiration
Submitted on August 17, 1995
Accepted on May 17, 2007
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