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The Following Information has been provided by the NIH. Anxiety disorders are serious medical illnesses that affect
approximately 19 million American adults. These disorders fill
people's lives with overwhelming anxiety and fear. Unlike the
relatively mild, brief anxiety caused by a stressful event such as a
business presentation or a first date, anxiety disorders are
chronic, relentless, and can grow progressively worse if not
treated.
Effective treatments for anxiety disorders are available, and
research is yielding new, improved therapies that can help most
people with anxiety disorders lead productive, fulfilling lives. If
you think you have an anxiety disorder, you should seek information
and treatment.
This information will help you identify the symptoms of anxiety
disorders, explain the role of research in understanding the causes
of these conditions, describe effective treatments, help you learn
how to obtain treatment and work with a doctor or therapist, and
suggest ways to make treatment more effective. The anxiety disorders
discussed in this brochure are panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, social phobia (or social
anxiety disorder), specific phobias, and generalized anxiety
disorder. Each anxiety disorder has its own distinct features, but
they are all bound together by the common theme of excessive,
irrational fear and dread.
Panic Disorders
People with panic disorder have feelings of terror that strike
suddenly and repeatedly with no warning. They can't predict when an
attack will occur, and many develop intense anxiety between
episodes, worrying when and where the next one will strike.
If you are having a panic attack, most likely your heart will
pound and you may feel sweaty, weak, faint, or dizzy. Your hands may
tingle or feel numb, and you might feel flushed or chilled. You may
have nausea, chest pain or smothering sensations, a sense of
unreality, or fear of impending doom or loss of control. You may
genuinely believe you're having a heart attack or losing your mind,
or on the verge of death.
Panic attacks can occur at any time, even during sleep. An attack
generally peaks within 10 minutes, but some symptoms may last much
longer.
Panic disorder affects about 2.4 million adult Americans and is
twice as common in women as in men. It most often begins during
late adolescence or early adulthood. Risk of developing panic
disorder appears to be inherited. Not everyone who experiences
panic attacks will develop panic disorder—for example, many people
have one attack but never have another. For those who do have panic
disorder, though, it's important to seek treatment. Untreated, the
disorder can become very disabling.
Many people with panic disorder visit the hospital emergency room
repeatedly or see a number of doctors before they obtain a correct
diagnosis. Some people with panic disorder may go for years without
learning that they have a real, treatable illness.
Panic disorder is often accompanied by other serious conditions
such as depression, drug abuse, or alcoholism and may lead to a
pattern of avoidance of places or situations where panic attacks
have occurred. For example, if a panic attack strikes while you're
riding in an elevator, you may develop a fear of elevators. If you
start avoiding them, that could affect your choice of a job or
apartment and greatly restrict other parts of your life.
Some people's lives become so restricted that they avoid normal,
everyday activities such as grocery shopping or driving. In some
cases they become housebound. Or, they may be able to confront a
feared situation only if accompanied by a spouse or other trusted
person.
Basically, these people avoid any situation in which they would
feel helpless if a panic attack were to occur. When people's lives
become so restricted, as happens in about one-third of people with
panic disorder the condition is called agoraphobia. Early
treatment of panic disorder can often prevent agoraphobia.
Panic disorder is one of the most treatable of the anxiety
disorders, responding in most cases to medications or carefully
targeted psychotherapy.
You may genuinely believe you're having a heart attack, losing
your mind, or are on the verge of death. Attacks can occur at any
time, even during sleep.
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