Anxiety Panic
Attacks
Anxiety Panic Attacks Is Overwhelming
Fear
Just ask anyone who has ever suffered from an
anxiety panic
attacks just how horrible it feels. Many of us
have probably had one and just didn't know what it was.
According to statistics by www.anxietypanic.com, one
out of every seventy-five people worldwide will experience
anxiety panic attacks once in their lives.
Anxiety is a normal reaction to stress, but when anxiety
becomes excessive, even routine situations become dreaded. At
this point, it has become debilitating; anxiety is now panic
with sudden surges of overwhelming fear that occur without
warning or reason.
Palpitations, hyperventilation, dizziness, chest pain,
headache, tingling of the hands or arms, feeling sweaty or
nauseous, and the immediate need to get the heck out of where
ever you are and fast, are just a few of the most common
symptoms of a panic attack.
These feelings of impending doom are not easy to get rid of
once they start, especially when you're sitting in a room full
of people, or when you're in the middle of Wal-Mart screaming
silently in your head.
Depersonalization and derealization can also occur with
panic, like you are living in a dream, feeling that you are not
really a part of what is going on around you, that you're
detached and looking from the outside in.
As symptoms continue and intensify, avoidance behavior
develops which can produce agoraphobia, causing the sufferer to
restrict social interaction and retreat to safety until total
withdrawal occurs. It’s important for people with
anxiety panic
attacks to learn all they can and be
knowledgeable about the illness and the available
treatments.
There are many theories about what causes anxiety and panic
disorder; is it biological, psychological or psychodynamic,
that is, is the disorder caused by a past experience or
trauma?
The most commonly used treatments for anxiety, panic
attacks, and phobias is a combination of medication and
psychotherapy, including cognitive therapy to change negative
thought processes and behavioral therapy to change daily
habits.
There are also drug-free therapies to induce relaxation,
release tension, lower blood pressure, slow heart rate and
breathing, in addition to meditation, hypnotherapy to overcome
specific phobias, and other alternative therapies.
For the most recent research and more about anxiety panic
attacks and related topics, go online to National Panic &
Anxiety Disorder News at www.npadnews.com. Information is
updated regularly about new conventional and alternative
treatments for anxiety disorders.
If you feel like you have, or could be developing
anxiety panic
attacks, go online and take a self-screening
test at one of many informative sites to see if your symptoms
indicate an anxiety disorder.
|