Some of the more common psychological disorders in cardiovascular medicine include anxiety disorders, depressive disorders, and somatoform disorders. Anxiety disorders, including panic attacks and generalized anxiety disorder, are the most common psychological disorders in cardiovascular medicine. Among them, panic attack is the most common anxiety disorder in cardiovascular medicine. It is a sudden acute anxiety attack, often accompanied by obvious cardiovascular system symptoms, such as sudden palpitations, chest tightness, and elevated blood pressure, which can be accompanied by generalized weakness, shaking, and numbness of the extremities, etc. The duration is usually within 30-60 minutes. In severe cases, panic attacks are experienced as if suffocation is imminent, death is imminent, and fear is overwhelming. Panic attacks are often misdiagnosed in cardiovascular medicine as arrhythmias, coronary artery disease, heart failure and pheochromocytoma. Patients with generalized anxiety disorder worry, stress, and fear all the time, while there is no objective threat or danger of some kind. Although the patient is aware that this is a subjective overthinking, the patient’s inability to control it makes it quite distressing. Depressive disorder is a relatively common psychological disorder in cardiovascular medicine, with core symptoms of depressed mood, slowed thinking and delayed behavior. Other symptoms are a marked reduction in active activity, pessimism and despair, spending days as if they were years, and loss of interest in life; some self-blame, often guilt, thinking that everything is gray, and in severe cases, suicidal behavior can arise from negative, anorexic ideas; it can be accompanied by varying degrees of anxiety symptoms. Somatoform disorders, including somatoform pain disorder is a neurological disorder dominated by a wide variety of frequently changing somatic symptoms, with a chronic fluctuating course. It is also a relatively common psychological disorder in cardiovascular medicine, manifesting as symptoms of the cardiovascular system, such as palpitations, chest tightness and chest pain, which can be accompanied by symptoms of depression or anxiety, but do not meet the diagnostic criteria of depression or anxiety positive. For example, there is a case of a patient who had persistent and prolonged chest pain with combined depression and anxiety symptoms 8 years ago, when the coronary angiography vessels were completely normal, and 8 years later the coronary angiography showed severe stenosis in two vessels and no improvement in symptoms after placement of 2 stents, which is typical of somatoform pain disorder.