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Anxiety Disorders
Source: Focus Adolescent Services- http://www.focusas.com/Anxiety.html
Anxiety disorders are the most common of all the mental
disorders. They affect an estimated 8 to 10 of every 100 children
and adolescents.
Everybody knows what it's like to feel anxious the
butterflies in your stomach before a first date, the tension
you feel when your boss is angry, the way your heart pounds
if you're in danger. Anxiety rouses you to action. It gears
you up to face a threatening situation. It makes you study
harder for that exam, and keeps you on your toes when you're
making a speech. In general, it helps you cope.
Anxiety disorders, however, are illnesses that cause people
to feel frightened, distressed and uneasy for no apparent
reason. Young people with anxiety disorders experience excessive
fear, worry, or uneasiness that interferes with their daily
lives.
Anxiety disorders aren't just a case of "nerves."
They are illnesses, often related to the biological makeup
and life experiences of the individual, and they frequently
run in families. Left untreated, these disorders can dramatically
reduce productivity and significantly diminish an individual's
quality of life.
There are several types of anxiety disorders, each with
its own distinct features.
Anxiety disorders include:
- Phobia - Two major types of phobias are social phobia
and specific phobia. People with social phobia have an overwhelming
and disabling fear of scrutiny, embarrassment, or humiliation
in social situations, which leads to avoidance of many potentially
pleasurable and meaningful activities. People with specific
phobia experience extreme, disabling, and irrational fear
of something that poses little or no actual danger; the
fear leads to avoidance of objects or situations and can
cause people to limit their lives unnecessarily.
- Generalized anxiety disorder - Constant, exaggerated worrisome
thoughts and tension about everyday routine life events
and activities, lasting at least six months. Almost always
anticipating the worst even though there is little reason
to expect it; accompanied by physical symptoms, such as
fatigue, trembling, muscle tension, headache, or nausea.
- Panic disorder - Repeated episodes of intense fear that
strike often and without warning. Physical symptoms include
chest pain, heart palpitations, shortness of breath, dizziness,
abdominal distress, feelings of unreality, and fear of dying.
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Repeated, unwanted thoughts
or compulsive behaviors (such as counting or hand-washing)
that seem impossible to stop or control.
- Post-traumatic stress disorder - A pattern of flashbacks
and other symptoms that occurs in children who have experienced
a psychologically distressing event such as physical or
sexual abuse, being a victim or witness of violence, or
exposure to some other traumatic event such as a bombing
or hurricane.
- It is common for an anxiety disorder to accompany another
anxiety disorder, or in some cases depression, eating disorders
or substance abuse. Anxiety disorders can also co-exist
with illnesses such as heart disease, high blood pressure,
irritable bowel syndrome, thyroid conditions, and migraine
headaches. In such instances, these disorders will also
need to be treated. Before undergoing any treatment, it
is important to have a thorough medical exam to rule out
other possible causes.
Many people with anxiety disorders can be helped with
treatment.
Many people misunderstand anxiety disorders and other mental
illnesses and think individuals should be able to overcome
the symptoms by sheer willpower. Wishing the symptoms away
does not work.
Therapy for anxiety disorders often involves medication
or specific forms of psychotherapy.
Medications, although not cures, can sometimes be effective
at relieving anxiety symptoms. Today, there are more medications
available than ever before to treat anxiety disorders. So
if one drug is not successful, there are usually others to
try. In addition, new medications to treat anxiety symptoms
are under development.
For most of the medications that are prescribed to treat
anxiety disorders, the doctor usually starts the patient on
a low dose and gradually increases it to the full dose. Every
medication has side effects, and it is important to know what
these are. If side effects become a problem, the doctor may
advise the patient to stop taking the medication and to wait
a week or longer for certain drugs before trying
another one. When treatment is near an end, the doctor will
taper the dosage gradually.
Behavioral therapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy can
be effective for treating several of the anxiety disorders.
Behavioral therapy focuses on changing specific actions and
uses several techniques to decreases or stop unwanted behavior.
For example, one technique trains patients in diaphragmatic
breathing, a special breathing exercise involving slow, deep
breaths to reduce anxiety. This is necessary because people
who are anxious often hyperventilate, taking rapid shallow
breaths that can trigger rapid heartbeat, lightheadedness,
and other symptoms. Another technique exposure therapy
gradually exposes patients to what frightens them and
helps them cope with their fears.
Like behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy teaches
patients to react differently to the situations and bodily
sensations that trigger panic attacks and other anxiety symptoms.
However, patients also learn to understand how their thinking
patterns contribute to their symptoms and how to change their
thoughts so that symptoms are less likely to occur. This awareness
of thinking patterns is combined with exposure and other behavioral
techniques to help people confront their feared situations.
For example, someone who becomes lightheaded during a panic
attack and fears he is going to die can be helped with the
following approach used in cognitive-behavioral therapy. The
therapist asks him to spin in a circle until he becomes dizzy.
When he becomes alarmed and starts thinking, "I'm going
to die," he learns to replace that thought with a more
appropriate one, such as "It's just a little dizziness
I can handle it."
Information provided by the National
Institute of Mental Health |