Targeting the Root of Panic, Not Just the Symptoms
If your medication helps but the panic is still there underneath, you are not imagining it. SSRIs, SNRIs, and benzodiazepines can quiet the alarm. They do not always retrain the system that keeps firing it. EMDR is designed to do that different job.
Why Medication Alone Can Plateau
When the alarm is quieter, but the pattern is still there
Panic attacks are not a willpower problem. They are not a character flaw. They are not you being “dramatic.” What you are describing is a nervous system that has learned, somewhere along the way, to fire a full-body emergency response at a situation that is not actually an emergency. The body does not know that. It just runs the sequence.
If you have already talked to a psychiatrist or primary care provider, you have probably heard about SSRIs, SNRIs, and benzodiazepines. Many people find real relief with these medications, and we never tell a client otherwise. The question we get asked often, by clients who come to Connect Clinical Services already on an antidepressant or anti-anxiety prescription, is a quieter one: the medication is doing something, but it feels like I am still on the edge of the next attack. Or, the medication helped for a while, but I can still feel the panic pattern underneath. Or, I do not want to stay on a benzodiazepine for the rest of my life, and I do not know what else to try.
That gap is what this article is about. It is the gap between quieting the alarm and retraining the system that keeps pulling it. EMDR, short for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, is one of the few therapy approaches built specifically for that second job. If you want the broader overview of our approach first, the EMDR therapy page is a good place to orient, and our panic attack therapy service page covers the full treatment picture.
A note before we go further
CCS does not prescribe medication. We are licensed psychotherapists, not psychiatric prescribers. We work alongside your physician or psychiatrist. Nothing in this article is a recommendation to stop, start, or change a medication. Those decisions belong to you and your prescriber. What we can do is offer a therapy modality that often addresses panic at a level medication does not reach.
What this article is and is not
This is not a general anxiety post. For that, read our piece on psychotherapy for anxiety. This is also not a general panic explainer. We already have one of those at panic attack treatment in Houston, which covers the basics of what panic is and what standard care looks like. And this is not a general EMDR primer. If you want that, see what is EMDR therapy.
What this is: a focused look at the specific combination of EMDR plus panic attacks plus medication that is helping but not resolving the pattern. That is the question you came in with. Let us stay with it.
The Mechanism
Where panic actually comes from
Panic attacks are, at the neurological level, a false alarm. The amygdala, a small almond-shaped structure deep in your brain, is the part that decides what counts as a threat. In someone with panic disorder, that circuit has become sensitized. It fires the fight-or-flight response at cues that are not actually dangerous. A tight chest. A crowded store. A highway on-ramp. A pause in a conversation. The body dumps adrenaline. The heart rate climbs. Breathing gets shallow. You feel like you are going to die, pass out, or lose control. None of that is imagined. Your physiology is genuinely doing what it would do if a bear walked into the room. The bear just is not there.
In most cases, that sensitization is a learned association. Somewhere in your history, your nervous system encoded a link between a sensation or a context and the message “something is very wrong.” This can be a discrete event (a medical scare, a traumatic moment, a near-miss car accident, a bad reaction to a substance, a sudden loss), or it can be a slower buildup (chronic stress, an early environment where the body never got to fully stand down, an unpredictable caregiver, an unresolved grief that sits in the chest). Often people cannot name when it started. That is fine. The body remembers even when the mind cannot sequence it.
Then a second layer gets added on top. After the first few panic attacks, you start being afraid of the panic attacks themselves. This is sometimes called fear of the fear, and it is one of the most cruel features of panic disorder. The sensations that used to be neutral (a slightly elevated heart rate from walking up stairs, a warm flush from eating spicy food, a dizzy moment when you stand up) now get interpreted as the first signs of an incoming attack. Your amygdala reads those sensations as the bear. A new panic attack starts because you were afraid of having one. This is the feedback loop that keeps panic disorder chronic.
Here is the map of what each treatment does:
- CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy) helps you challenge the thoughts and beliefs that inflate the fear. It teaches you to notice catastrophizing (“I am going to die”) and replace it with accurate appraisal (“this is panic, it will pass”). Good, evidence-based, useful.
- SSRIs and SNRIs lower the baseline reactivity of the nervous system. They dampen the amygdala’s volume knob over weeks to months of consistent use. Many people find they have fewer attacks on an effective dose.
- Benzodiazepines act quickly on GABA receptors to stop an attack in progress. They are often prescribed as rescue medication. They do not retrain anything. They interrupt.
- EMDR is designed to go after the underlying associative memory network, the one that linked the original sensation or moment to “life-threatening emergency.” When you reprocess that network, the false alarm loses its trigger.
None of these are competitors. They operate on different layers of the same system. EMDR does not replace medication, and medication does not do what EMDR does.
Why EMDR Works Here
Why EMDR specifically helps with panic
Francine Shapiro developed EMDR in the late 1980s as a trauma treatment. What researchers and clinicians have noticed since is that panic disorder often responds to the same protocol, because panic, at its root, is frequently a trauma response wearing different clothes. The body is stuck in a survival loop tied to an old experience. EMDR is built to unstick that loop.
In the EMDR for panic protocol, your therapist typically identifies two categories of target memories:
- The seed memory. This is the precipitating event, the moment your nervous system first paired an experience or sensation with “emergency.” For some clients it is the first panic attack itself. For others it is an earlier moment: a health scare, a loss of control, a frightening caregiver, a medical procedure, a car accident, a bad trip on a substance, a sudden loss of someone close. Sometimes the seed is clear from the first session. Sometimes it surfaces gradually as the work unfolds.
- The secondary fear loop. This is the fear of the panic attack itself, along with the specific sensations, places, or situations that have since become triggers. The grocery store. The freeway. The elevator. The pounding heart. Each of these has usually been encoded as its own mini-threat.
During bilateral stimulation, which most often looks like following your therapist’s fingers with your eyes, or alternating left-right taps or tones, the brain appears to access these memory networks in a different state than ordinary recall. Controlled research and clinical observation both suggest that bilateral stimulation, combined with paced exposure to the target memory, lowers the emotional charge on that network. The memory is still there. You can still describe it. It no longer detonates the body.
What this means, practically, is that clients often report the following pattern as EMDR progresses:
- General anxiety does not necessarily vanish. Life still has stressors. You still feel worry.
- The sharp, spiking panic attack pattern, the one that used to come out of nowhere and flatten you, often softens significantly. For many clients it stops.
- The places and situations that used to feel impossible become workable again.
- The fear of the fear loosens, because your body is no longer running emergency protocols on a sneeze or a stairwell.
We want to be careful here. We are not promising a cure, and anyone who promises a cure for panic disorder is selling something. What we can say is that many clients find EMDR moves the needle on panic in a way that purely cognitive or purely medication-based approaches have not, precisely because it addresses the layer those tools do not target.
The Protocol
What an EMDR for panic treatment plan usually looks like
EMDR has eight phases. They are not arbitrary. Each one is designed to make sure your body stays safe while your brain does meaningful work. Here is what the panic-focused version looks like in our practice.
History taking
We map your panic. When did the first attack happen? What was happening in your life that month? What sensations or places became triggers after? Are there earlier moments in your history that might be the actual seed? We identify the target memories, including the first panic attack, any precipitating events, and the situations where panic now fires.
Preparation
Before any reprocessing, we stabilize. You learn resource states, grounding tools, and nervous system regulation techniques you can use between sessions and during an attack. We do not skip this phase. If the resourcing is not solid, processing is not safe.
Assessment
We pick one target memory and establish baseline measurements: the image, the negative belief (“I am going to die,” “I am losing control”), the positive belief you want to install instead, the body sensation, and the distress rating.
Desensitization
This is the bilateral stimulation phase. You hold the target memory briefly, follow the stimulation, and we pause to check in. The memory typically moves through associated material until the distress drops. This phase is what most people picture when they picture EMDR.
Installation
Once the distress has dropped, we install the positive belief that fits the now-reprocessed memory. “I am safe now.” “It is over.” “I can handle what my body feels.”
Body scan
We check the body. Panic lives in the body, so even after the memory and the belief have shifted, we scan for residual tension, tightness, or held charge. If anything remains, we address it.
Closure
We bring you back to baseline before the session ends. You leave regulated, not raw. This is non-negotiable.
Reevaluation
At the next session, we check how the processed memory is sitting now, track panic frequency and intensity between sessions, and decide what comes next. Progress is measured with validated tools like the GAD-7 and PDSS, not vibes.
A focused EMDR panic protocol often runs 8 to 12 weeks of weekly 60 to 90 minute sessions, though this varies meaningfully by history. A client whose panic is tied cleanly to one identifiable seed memory may move faster. A client with complex developmental trauma underneath the panic may need a longer course or an integrated approach that combines EMDR with Somatic Experiencing or Neurofeedback. We do not promise timelines. We track what is actually changing and adjust.
Working with Your Prescriber
EMDR works alongside, not against, your psychiatrist’s plan
One of the most common concerns we hear from new clients: “If I start EMDR, do I have to come off my medication?” The answer is no, and anyone who tells you otherwise is out of their scope.
CCS does not prescribe. We are a team of licensed psychotherapists, and we collaborate with your prescribing clinician on the medication side. With your written consent, our Clinical Director can communicate directly with your psychiatrist or primary care provider so everyone is working from the same picture. Here is how the medication piece typically goes:
- Sometimes medication stays where it is throughout treatment. Many clients find the combination of EMDR plus their current SSRI or SNRI works well. Medication provides the floor. EMDR does the retraining. Nobody is changing anything.
- Sometimes medication comes down as EMDR progresses. Some clients, after several months of EMDR, find that their nervous system is running quieter than it used to, and they and their prescriber decide together to gradually reduce a dose. This is a decision made by you and your psychiatrist, not us.
- Sometimes medication goes up temporarily. EMDR can surface material that is emotionally activating. Occasionally a prescriber will adjust a dose upward during an intensive period of processing and then reassess later. Again, their call.
- For benzodiazepines specifically: some clients carry long-standing concerns about being dependent on a rescue medication. EMDR may, over time, reduce how often you feel you need that rescue. Any change in benzodiazepine use needs to be done under your prescriber’s direct supervision because abrupt changes can be medically risky.
There is no pressure from us in any direction. We do not run a “medication-free” practice or a “medication-first” practice. We run a practice that respects the fact that your brain is one organ on one body, and that good care coordinates.
When to Wait
When EMDR may not be the right first step for panic
EMDR is powerful, which means the honest version of this article has to name when it is not the right first move. Good EMDR therapists turn clients away from EMDR at the start when the stabilization work has not happened yet. That is a feature, not a flaw. Circumstances where we would typically want to do something else before starting reprocessing include:
- Active suicidality or recent self-harm. Stabilization, safety planning, and close coordination with a prescriber come first. Reprocessing can wait.
- Severe dissociation. If you lose chunks of time, feel regularly outside your body, or have parts of self that surface and take over, the preparation phase needs to be substantially longer, and a different approach may fit better before EMDR.
- Untreated substance use. If you are using alcohol or substances to manage panic, that pattern needs to stabilize first. EMDR does not mix well with active heavy use. We can still help you; it is a sequencing question. Our piece on EMDR for addiction covers this ordering in more depth.
- Recent medical event that has not been cleared. If your panic symptoms started after a cardiac event, a thyroid issue, a new medication, a head injury, or a significant health change, please get cleared by your physician first. Sometimes what looks like panic has a medical driver that needs treatment in its own right.
- Acute crisis or housing instability. If life is currently on fire (a custody battle in week three, a move in ten days, a job just lost), stabilization therapy often fits better than deep reprocessing until the external pressure eases.
None of these are reasons you cannot heal. They are reasons to sequence carefully. We will tell you honestly, in the consultation, whether we think EMDR is the right first step or whether we would start somewhere else and circle back.
If your panic is still there under the medication, let’s talk.
Our Clinical Director offers a free consultation to help you figure out whether EMDR is a fit for what you are carrying.
8100 Washington Ave, Suite 170, Houston TX 77007. Telehealth available across Texas.
Common Questions
Frequently asked: EMDR and panic attacks
Can EMDR treat panic disorder?
How many EMDR sessions does panic usually take?
Can I do EMDR if I am on an SSRI or SNRI?
What about benzodiazepines and EMDR?
Does EMDR work on agoraphobia too?
Is EMDR covered by insurance?
What if I have a panic attack during an EMDR session?
How is this different from CBT for panic?
Ready to find out if EMDR is a fit for your panic?
We are a Houston-based practice specializing in EMDR, Brainspotting, Somatic Experiencing, and Neurofeedback for trauma, anxiety, and panic disorder. Our Clinical Director offers a free consultation to help you decide whether EMDR is the right next step.
You can also read more about our anxiety therapy approach, the full panic attack therapy service, or our earlier panic attack treatment overview.
Serving Houston’s Heights, River Oaks, West University, Bellaire, Memorial, Montrose, Upper Kirby, and all of Texas via telehealth.
Request Your Free Consultation
We respond within 24 hours, often same-day.
Prefer to call? (713) 564-5146
Last reviewed March 2026 by Guy Bender, LPC, Clinical Director at Connect Clinical Services.

