Pharmacopsychiatry 2010; 43(4): 152-153
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1243252
Letter

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Panic Attack after Spice Abuse in a Patient with ADHD

H. Müller1 , H. B. Huttner1 , M. Köhrmann1 , J. E. Wielopolski1 , J. Kornhuber1 , W. Sperling1
  • 1Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

received 07.05.2009 revised 20.10.2009

accepted 27.10.2009

Publication Date:
01 February 2010 (online)

Preview

To the best of our knowledge, we here report the first case of a panic attack based on Spice consumption in a 21-year-old male patient with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The condition had been treated over several years with methylphenidate, but which had been taken irregularly. Within minutes after a third-ever consumption of Spice, the patient developed both blurred vision and an unsteady gait as well as an acute onset of an agonal state with the fear of ignorance of his friends. This panic attack was accompanied by a vegetative hyperirritability that lasted for more than two hours. After admission to the emergency department, acute cardiac disease was ruled out and the patient was transferred to our Department of Psychiatry where fixation became necessary. After intravenous application of 2 mg lorazepam and isotonic fluid substitution, the patient recovered over night. In light of the previously presumed association of panic attacks and consumption of cannabinoids, we here discuss the potential de-masking of panic attacks after Spice consumption (as a synthetic cannabinoid) by ADHD-based imbalances of the dopaminergic and norepiphrenic receptor profiles.

References

Correspondence

H. Müller

Department of Psychiatry

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

Schwabachanlage 6

91054 Erlangen

Germany

Phone: +49/913/1853 3001

Fax: +49/913/1853 4862

Email: helge.mueller@uk-erlangen.de