Symptoms of a panic attack are a sudden onset, intense frightening experience with a sense of loss of control or near-death, often accompanied by symptoms of autonomic dysfunction, such as headache, panic, and sweating. Panic attacks are a common psychiatric emergency, often recurrent and unpredictable. The patient develops in a situation with no specific fear, is conscious during the attack, which rarely lasts more than an hour, and the main symptom is an intense experience of panic, accompanied by symptoms of autonomic dysfunction. The panic experience is a sudden onset of symptoms, with the patient experiencing nervousness, fear, a sense of loss of control or near-death, a sense of impending doom, generalized trembling, fidgeting, or generalized weakness. Panic attacks are accompanied by symptoms of autonomic dysfunction, such as headache, dizziness, tachycardia, sweating, numbness of the limbs, chest tightness, and dyspnea. Panic attacks can be reduced or eliminated with treatment, improving quality of life, and regular follow-up is recommended.