Panic Disorder

Panic Attacks & Panic Disorder: Why It Feels Like Dying (and Why It Isn't)

Racing heart, crushing chest tightness, the certainty that something is catastrophically wrong — a panic attack can feel indistinguishable from a medical emergency. A clinical guide to what's actually happening, and how it's treated.

By Dr. Varun Gupta 10 min read Psychiatrist, Jammu
Written By Dr. Varun Gupta, MBBS, MD Psychiatry
Medically Reviewed By Dr. Varun Gupta, MD Psychiatry — Clinical & Editorial Review
Last Updated / Reviewed July 2026

A large share of the panic attack patients I see have already been to an emergency room at least once — often more than once — utterly convinced they were having a heart attack. Normal ECGs and blood tests brought temporary relief, followed by the same fear returning days or weeks later. That cycle is one of the clearest signs of panic disorder.

This article explains what actually happens in the body during a panic attack, how panic disorder is diagnosed, and what treatment that genuinely works looks like.

What Exactly Is a Panic Attack?

A panic attack is a sudden surge of intense fear accompanied by physical symptoms — racing heart, breathlessness, chest tightness, dizziness — that typically peaks within minutes and then eases on its own.

Panic attacks involve rapid heartbeat, shortness of breath, chest discomfort, sweating, and a sense of disorientation that usually peaks within minutes before subsiding.[1] The attack itself is not dangerous, even though every instinct in the moment insists otherwise — it is the body's alarm system firing at full intensity without an actual external threat to respond to.

Clinical Insight

I tell patients that a panic attack is your body's fire alarm going off during a small kitchen mishap — the alarm itself is loud, frightening, and entirely real, but it doesn't mean the building is burning down. Understanding this doesn't stop the first few attacks, but it becomes a genuinely useful anchor once treatment is underway.

Is It a Panic Attack or a Heart Attack?

You cannot reliably tell the difference yourself — any new chest pain, breathlessness or racing heart needs urgent medical evaluation, and panic disorder should only be diagnosed after cardiac and other medical causes have been ruled out.

This is not a distinction to make at home. If you or someone with you experiences sudden chest pain, breathlessness, or a racing heart for the first time, seek emergency medical evaluation immediately. Once a medical cause has genuinely been ruled out — and especially if the same pattern recurs — panic disorder becomes a much more likely explanation, and that's the point at which a psychiatric evaluation is most useful.

Physical Symptoms Racing heart, chest tightness, breathlessness, dizziness — peaking within minutes. Catastrophic Thoughts "I'm dying," "I'm losing control" — the mind's interpretation of the alarm. Avoidance Behaviour Avoiding places or situations linked to past attacks — can narrow life over time. Anticipatory Anxiety Persistent worry about when the next attack will happen — often more disabling than attacks.
Fig. 1 — The four components that together define panic disorder, not just the attacks themselves.

When Do Panic Attacks Become Panic Disorder?

Panic disorder is diagnosed when panic attacks are recurrent and unexpected, and are followed by at least a month of persistent worry or behaviour changes aimed at avoiding future attacks.

An estimated 2.7% of U.S. adults experience panic disorder in a given year, and nearly half of those cases are classified as serious in terms of impairment.[1] A single panic attack, even a frightening one, does not equal panic disorder — the diagnosis depends on the pattern that follows: recurrent attacks plus ongoing worry or behaviour changes because of the fear of future ones.[2]

Agoraphobia

Agoraphobia can develop alongside panic disorder — an intense fear of situations where escape or help might be difficult if an attack were to occur, such as crowded places, public transport, or being far from home. Left unaddressed, this can gradually shrink a person's world down to a small number of "safe" places.[2]

Clinical Insight

What often brings a patient to me isn't the panic attacks themselves — it's realising they've quietly stopped driving on highways, or started declining invitations, without fully registering how much their life has narrowed. Naming that shrinkage out loud is often the moment people become ready to start treatment.

6 Core Symptoms Racing Heart Chest Tightness Shortness of Breath Dizziness Derealisation Fear of Dying
Fig. 2 — Six symptoms that commonly appear together during a panic attack.

What Does Effective Treatment for Panic Disorder Involve?

Treatment for panic disorder typically involves cognitive behavioural therapy, medication, or a combination of both, chosen based on severity, preference, and how the person has responded to treatment before.

Treatment for panic disorder typically involves psychotherapy, medication, or both, chosen in consultation with a mental health professional based on individual needs and preferences.[2]

Clinical Insight

Most patients improve faster than they expect once treatment starts — panic disorder responds well to the right combination of therapy and, where needed, medication. The biggest delay I see isn't treatment failing; it's people cycling through emergency rooms for months or years before a psychiatric evaluation is even considered.

"The goal of treatment isn't to never feel your heart race again — it's to stop being afraid of your own body."
— Dr. Varun Gupta

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell a panic attack apart from a heart attack?

You often can't tell in the moment, and any new chest pain, breathlessness or racing heart should be evaluated urgently to rule out a cardiac cause. This distinction should be made by a medical professional, not assumed at home.

Do panic attacks mean I have panic disorder?

Not necessarily. A single panic attack can happen to almost anyone under enough stress. Panic disorder is diagnosed when attacks are recurrent and unexpected, followed by persistent worry or behaviour changes aimed at avoiding future attacks.

Can panic disorder be treated without medication?

Yes, for many people. Cognitive behavioural therapy alone is effective for panic disorder, though some benefit most from a combination of therapy and medication, particularly with severe or long-standing symptoms.

References

  1. National Institute of Mental Health. Panic Disorder — Statistics. nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/panic-disorder
  2. National Institute of Mental Health. Panic Disorder: When Fear Overwhelms. nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/panic-disorder-when-fear-overwhelms

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