Intense exercise more effective in treating panic disorder

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A study suggests that brief, intense intermittent exercise might be more effective in treating panic disorder, compared to standard care which involves psychotherapy sessions.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a form of psychotherapy that helps an individual develop strategies to address personal problems by changing one’s thought processes.
Researchers from the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil said that supervised walking interspersed with repeated 30-second high-intensity sprints is a more effective treatment for panic disorder, compared to ‘interoceptive exposure’- where therapists trigger common symptoms of panic attacks like chest pain, sweating, rapid respiration, and a racing heart in a safe, controlled environment.
“Here we show that a 12-week program of brief intense intermittent exercise can be used as an interoceptive exposure strategy to treat panic disorder patients,” author Ricardo William Muotri, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Sao Paulo Medical School in Brazil, said.
The study, looked at 102 adult women and men diagnosed with panic disorder.
The participants were divided in two groups and did three sessions every week of their allocated exercise during a follow-up period of 12 weeks. No drugs were administered to either group throughout the trial.
Patients in the experimental group began each session with a bout of muscle-stretching, followed by 15 minutes of walking and one to six 30-seconds-long bouts of high-intensity running alternating with 4.5-minutes of active recovery, and ending with additional 15 minutes of walking.
Patients in the second group did segmental muscle contraction exercises in the brachial, scapular, cervical, facial, dorsal, abdominal, and lower limb regions, followed by localised muscle relaxation.
Data collected via monitoring devices worn during the exercises was analysed.
Average scores on the ‘Panic and Agoraphobia’ scale and those for anxiety and depression fell over time in both the groups, but more steeply in the brief intense intermittent exercise arm, the researchers said.
Frequency and severity of panic attacks also decreased more in the brief intense intermittent exercise arm, they said. (PTI)

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