Neural Abnormalities in Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia: A Meta-Analysis of Functional Activation Studies
C. Baten, A. M. Klassen, G. Zamora, J. H. Shepherd, A. Badawia, A. Kailay, C. R. Leung, J. Sahota, S. Saravia, J. A. Miller, P. Hamilton, M. D. Sacchet, I. H. Gotlib, E. Woo, D. W. Hedges, C. H. Miller

TL;DR
This study identifies consistent brain activity patterns in people with panic disorder and agoraphobia compared to healthy individuals, which could help develop better treatments.
Contribution
The study provides a meta-analysis of neural activation patterns in panic disorder and agoraphobia using a large sample size and advanced statistical methods.
Findings
PD/AG participants showed significant abnormal neural activation in cerebral cortex and basal ganglia regions.
Findings suggest potential for brain-based clinical interventions like non-invasive brain stimulation.
Results highlight the need for further research on neural differences between PD and AG.
Abstract
Panic disorder (PD) and agoraphobia (AG) are highly comorbid anxiety disorders with an increasing prevalence that have a significant clinical and public health impact but are not adequately recognized and treated. Although the current functional neuroimaging literature has documented a range of neural abnormalities in these disorders, primary studies are often not sufficiently powered and their findings have been inconsistent. This meta-analysis aims to advance our understanding of the neural underpinnings of PD and AG by identifying the most robust patterns of differential neural activation that differentiate individuals diagnosed with one of or both these disorders from age-matched healthy controls. We conducted a comprehensive literature search in the PubMed database for all peer-reviewed, whole-brain, task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activation studies that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes
