ok, Well first of all, Kernel panics are caused by hardware problems, not software. So if you're having a Kernel panic, you have something wrong with your mac. Are you using a mac laptop by any chance?
In the past I had a 2010 MBP that started kernel panicing whenever I ran Logic or garageband, for no reason I could figure out. Apple support was clueless. It happened after I updated to Mavericks, which seemed like it must be their fault. I could not tie it ot any particular plugin per say, but it didn't matter ultimately because after some frustrating months I finally figured from google searching that I wasn't the only person having this problem and it was related to the GPU on my MBP. Sure enough, I could replicate the kernel panic easily by running a CineBench test. The reason it was happening in LogicPro all the time was simply becuase LogicPro was making more use of the nVidia GPU, which was related somehow to the kernel panic.
Then I found a utility that disables the nVidia GPU most of the time, which basically eliminated the kernel panics msot of the time, but not always, because sometimes OSX would still force the nVidia GPU.
A year or two later some independent electronics engineer figured out the problem is related to a particular capacitor on the logicboard of the MBP, which is connected to the GPU..and this capacitor, Apple used a $1 part instead of a $3 part, and the $1 part has this problem when it changes temperatures rapidly. So the fix is to have that capcitor replaced and problem be gone. Many people on the internet have performed this change and the problem is now gone for them. Someone else made a Kext hack that gets around it a bit by limiting how much speed stepping takes place in the Mac. that's what I have been using for several years and not a single kernel panic ever since.
So anyway, the moral of the story, Apple hardware has had some issues like this, as it turns out there were a few MacBook products with similar issues, not exactly the same as this, but still issues...and hardware related...
Kernel panics happen from hardware problems, you could have a bad logicboard capacitor like I did, or could have bad memory simms or any flakey hardware part could cause it. And certain software might expose the problem more then others, but still the problem is not really the software which is just doing what its supposed to be able to do, the real problem is flakey hardware. kernel panics suck, I feel for you, but that is the real problem you're having.