Anxiety Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ventilatory Physiology in Children at Risk for Anxiety
The importance of the proposed research project derives from a steady accumulation of
research findings on the relationship between respiration and anxiety. The relationship
between panic disorder and abnormalities in respiration has been recognized for more than 10
years. Increased sensitivity to CO2 exposure in panic disorder represents the most
consistent finding supporting this relationship. The current proposal follows naturally from
three sets of recent research findings in the area of panic disorder. First, our group has
recently shown that children with anxiety disorders, like adults with panic disorder,
exhibit increased sensitivity to CO2. Second, other researchers have shown that
psychiatrically healthy relatives of patients with panic disorder also exhibit increased
sensitvity to CO2. Finally, our group has also recently shown that children of adults with
panic disorder exhibit high rates of anxiety disorders, particularly separation anxiety
disorder, the childhood anxiety disorder which exhibits the highest degree of CO2
sensitivity. These three findings suggest that children of parents with panic disorder may
exhibit a latent vulnerability to panic disorder, manifested as increased sensitivity to
CO2.
A secondary feature of the proposed research project derives from a steady accumulation of
research findings in basic science literature outlining the parts of the brain that mediate
fear and anxiety in animals. It may be possible to use insights from research on the brain
basis of fear in animals to develop methods for assessing the brain basis of fear in humans.
Moreover, work in animals notes changes in brain systems that mediate fear and anxiety
across development. If development. If developmentally sensitive methods could be used to
study fear in children, it may also be possible to greatly enhance our understanding of the
manner in which the relationship between brain function and fear changes as children age. If
similarities could be demonstrated across animals and humans in these areas, new insights on
potential treatments for anxiety could be more readily transferred from the laboratory to
the clinic. A second goal of the current proposal is to refine two neuropsychological probes
that are thought to assess functional aspects of brain systems implicated in fear and
anxiety across various species, from rodents to humans.
The importance of the proposed research project derives from a steady accumulation of
research findings on the relationship between respiration and anxiety. The relationship
between panic disorder and abnormalities in respiration has been recognized for more than 10
years. Increased sensitivity to CO2 exposure in panic disorder represents the most
consistent finding supporting this relationship. The current proposal follows naturally from
three sets of recent research findings in the area of panic disorder. First, our group has
recently shown that children with anxiety disorders, like adults with panic disorder,
exhibit increased sensitivity to CO2. Second, other researchers have shown that
psychiatrically healthy relatives of patients with panic disorder also exhibit increased
sensitvity to CO2. Finally, our group has also recently shown that children of adults with
panic disorder exhibit high rates of anxiety disorders, particularly separation anxiety
disorder, the childhood anxiety disorder which exhibits the highest degree of CO2
sensitivity. These three findings suggest that children of parents with panic disorder may
exhibit a latent vulnerability to panic disorder, manifested as increased sensitivity to
CO2.
A secondary feature of the proposed research project derives from a steady accumulation of
research findings in basic science literature outlining the parts of the brain that mediate
fear and anxiety in animals. It may be possible to use insights from research on the brain
basis of fear in animals to develop methods for assessing the brain basis of fear in humans.
Moreover, work in animals notes changes in brain systems that mediate fear and anxiety
across development. If developmentally sensitive methods could be used to study fear in
children, it may also be possible to greatly enhance our understanding of the manner in
which the relationship between brain function and fear changes as children age. If
similarities could be demonstrated across animals and humans in these areas, new insights on
potential treatments for anxiety could be more readily transferred from the laboratory to
the clinic. A second goal of the current proposal is to refine two neuropsychological probes
that are thought to assess functional aspects of brain systems implicated in fear and
anxiety across various species, from rodents to humans.
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