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Most people experience feelings of anxiety before an important
event such as a big exam, business presentation, or first date.
Anxiety disorders, however, are illnesses that fill people's
lives with overwhelming anxiety and fear that are chronic, unremitting,
and can grow progressively worse. Tormented by panic attacks,
obsessive thoughts, flashbacks of traumatic events, nightmares,
or countless frightening physical symptoms, some people with
anxiety disorders even become housebound.
How Common Are Anxiety Disorders?
Anxiety disorders, as a group, are the most common mental illness
in America. About 40 million American adults are affected by
these debilitating illnesses each year. Children and adolescents
can also develop anxiety disorders.
What Are the Different Kinds of Anxiety Disorders?
- 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 that seem impossible
to stop or control.
- Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder —Persistent
symptoms that occur after experiencing or witnessing a traumatic
event such as rape or other criminal assault, war, child abuse,
natural or human-caused disasters, or crashes. Nightmares,
flashbacks, numbing of emotions, depression, and feeling angry,
irritable or distracted and being easily startled are common.
Family members of victims can also develop this disorder.
- Phobias —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.
What Are Effective Treatments for Anxiety Disorders?
Treatments have been largely developed through research conducted
by NIMH and other research institutions. They help many people
with anxiety disorders and often combine medication and specific
types of psychotherapy.
A number of medications that were originally approved for treating
depression have been found to be effective for anxiety disorders
as well. Some of the newest of these antidepressants are called
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Other antianxiety
medications include groups of drugs called benzodiazepines and
beta-blockers. If one medication is not effective, others can
be tried. New medications are currently under development to
treat anxiety symptoms.
Two clinically-proven effective forms of psychotherapy used
to treat anxiety disorders are behavioral therapy and cognitive-behavioral
therapy. Behavioral therapy focuses on changing specific actions
and uses several techniques to stop unwanted behaviors. In addition
to the behavioral therapy techniques, cognitive-behavioral therapy
teaches patients to understand and change their thinking patterns
so they can react differently to the situations that cause them
anxiety.
This information was supplied by the National Institute of
Mental Health (NIMH) which is part of the National
Institutes
of Health (NIH), a component of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services.
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