Anxiety Disorders
Everyone suffers from anxiety from time to time. Anxiety is a feeling of uneasiness, nervousness, fear or worry, by real or perceived threats to our safety or well-being, along with physical symptoms discussed later on. Acting as an important survival mechanism for humans and animals, the anxiety response alerts us to impending danger and prepares us, both physically and mentally, to protect ourselves.
Many situations in daily life can lead to an anxiety response and may not require treatment. But when the symptoms of anxiety become persistent and severe enough to compromise quality of life or functioning, or if anxiety feelings and physical symptoms occur when there is no apparent danger, a person may require treatment for anxiety disorder.
What
are symptoms? | Who is affected? | What
causes?
How to treat? | What else can we do?
What
are the types and symptoms of anxiety disorders?
There are seven types of anxiety disorders:
- Agoraphobia is the fear of being alone outside of the
home or in public places. People with this disorder fear escape might be
difficult from such places in case of sudden incapacitation. They avoid
crowds, tunnels, bridges, and public transportation. Normal activities gradually
decrease until the fears and avoidance behavior dominate a person's life.
- Social Phobia is a persistent irrational fear of, and
compelling desire to avoid, situations in which a person might be humiliated
or embarrassed. Social Phobia, which causes people to avoid social engagements,
causes significant distress because the person often realizes that his or
her fear is excessive and unreasonable.
- Simple Phobia is persistent or irrational fear of, and
compelling desire to avoid, a particular object or situation other than
being alone. Phobic objects often include animals, and phobic situations
frequently involve heights or closed spaces.
- Panic Disorder is a tendency to experience attacks of
apprehension or fear during which a person feels some or all of the following
symptoms: 1) difficulty in breathing (dyspnea); 2) heart palpitations; 3)
chest pain or discomfort; 4) a choking or smothering sensation; 5) dizziness,
vertigo, or unsteady feelings; 6) feelings of unreality; 7) tingling in
hands or feet (paresthesias); 8) hot and cold flashes; 9) sweating; 10)
faintness; 11) trembling or shaking; 12) fear of dying, going crazy, or
doing something uncontrolled during an attack.
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder is a generalized, persistent
anxiety resulting in symptoms from at least three of these four categories:
1) motor tension, i.e., shakiness, jitteriness, jumpiness, trembling, tension,
muscle aches, fatigue, inability to relax, eyelid twitch, furrowed brow,
strained face, fidgeting, restlessness, easy startle; 2) autonomic hyperactivity:
sweating, heart pounding or racing, cold clammy hands, dry mouth, dizziness,
light-headedness, tingling in hands or feet, upset stomach, hot or cold
spells, frequent urination, diarrhea, discomfort in the pit of the stomach,
lump in the throat, flushing, pallor, high resting pulse and respiration
rate, 3) apprehensive expectation: anxiety, worry, fear, rumination, and
anticipation of misfortune to self or others, and 4) vigilance and scanning:
resulting in distractibility, difficulty concentrating, insomnia, feeling
"on edge," irritability, impatience.
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder may be characterized by either obsessions or compulsions: Obsessions are recurrent, persistent ideas, thoughts, images, or impulses that are not voluntarily produced, but thoughts that invade a person's consciousness and are experienced as senseless or repugnant. Attempts are made to ignore or suppress these thoughts. Compulsions are repetitive and seemingly purposeful behaviors that are performed according to certain rules or in a stereotyped fashion. The behavior is not an end in itself, but is designed to produce or prevent some future event or situation. However, the activity either is not connected in a realistic way with the event or may be clearly excessive. The behavior is performed with a sense of subjective compulsion coupled with a desire to resist, at least initially. The act does not produce a sense of pleasure, but rather a release of tension. The behavior is a significant source of distress to the person or interferes with social or role functioning.
Who
is affected?
An estimated 14.6% of Americans suffer from phobias, panic attacks, and obsessive-compulsive
disorders. Seventy-five percent do not seek treatment. However, many visit
their internists or family physicians with concerns about symptoms that may
be caused by an anxiety disorder. Recent studies indicate that 20 percent
of the ailments for which Americans seek a doctor's care are related to anxiety
symptoms.
What
are the causes of anxiety?
Today there are many situations or stressors that can lead to prolonged anxiety
responses - the demands of a stressful career, financial woes, divorce, and
family problems. Over time, symptoms such as irritability, edginess, depressed
mood and varied physical complaints may result. However, anxiety is not always
the result of current or past stress, and is not always a "mental" or "emotional"
problem. Persistent anxiety can produce a variety of emotional and physical
symptoms.
How
are anxiety disorders treated?
Following diagnosis by a physician or other mental health professional, treatment
may be undertaken through a variety of medical approaches, including behavior
therapy, psychotherapy, medication, or a combination. With appropriate medical
treatment, sufferers of anxiety disorders can improve, recover, and return
to normal activities. Today physicians and other mental health professionals
have a number of medications and therapies they can use to treat anxiety disorders.
Research indicates that 90 percent of phobic and obsessive-compulsive patients
will recover with behavior therapy. Other studies show that while they are
taking appropriate medications, 70 percent of those who suffer panic disorders
improve. Medications also have been shown to be effective for about half of
those with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
What
else can a person do?
After consulting with a physician and or other mental health professional,
the recommendations may include dietary changes (reduction of caffeine intake),
increase in exercise, and a course of therapy. To find better ways of coping
with pressures and circumstances that may have contributed, a person may join
a support group or seek individual counseling with a qualified therapist.
A person should recognize there are no "overnight cures" for persistent anxiety
and that many methods used work gradually to relieve anxiety, but these treatments
are highly effective and well worth the wait. If there is no apparent improvement
after a visit to a family physician or a mental health professional, help
should be sought from a psychiatrist.
Sources: Profiles of Persistent Anxiety, Mead Johnson Pharmaceuticals, Bristol Laboratories 1992; Anxiety and It's Disorders: The Nature and Treatment of Anxiety and Panic by David H. Barlow; and Panic-Phobic Disorders Clinic and Depression Clinic, K.P.S. Kamath, M.D.




