Abstract
IntroductionAttachment theory offers an evolutionary explanation for the occurrence of panic states. The distance between a mother and child causes the sensation of fear. The experience of feared annihilation, an intense fear reaction (panic), is presented as a threat to the individual’s cohesiveness, disrupting the mental representation of self-consciousness, specifically self-unity. Alterations in self-consciousness in schizophrenia are so important that they are mostly included among Kurt Schneider’s first-ranked symptoms. HypothesesBased on clinical trials, case reports, and brain imaging and pharmacological studies, a paradigm is proposed to explain the relationship between panic anxiety and psychosis. ConclusionThe psychosis-anxiety pathophysiology explanation needs further investigation into the brain areas that integrate self-monitoring with fear areas, but it seems possible to note the importance of the anterior cingulate cortex.
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