New York) reported results of several groups of subjects with anxiety, phobias, panic, depression, migraines and idiopathic seizures. In the summary "it found that virtually all subjects showed uncontrolled moderate to severe hyperventilation accompanied by EEG dysrhythmia" (Fried et al, 1990). It also highlights that hyperventilation and abnormal electrical signals in the brain were carried out simultaneously. Canadian scientists at the Department of Psychiatry (University of Manitoba, Winnipeg) measured the concentrations of carbon dioxide in more than 20 patients with panic disorder. Its average CO2 was also lower than the medical norm (Asmundson and Stein, 1994). There are many other studies reporting abnormally low CO2 values for people with various psychological and neurological problems. Is hyperventilation the cause of these health problems? There is no evidence to show that people with normal breathing parameters suffer from neurological or psychological problems.
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