Anxiety Disorders (General, Panic, Social)
What are Anxiety Disorders?
Anxiety is a normal reaction to stress – your mind and body's natural response to events that are threatening. A certain amount of worry and anxiety is normal for everyone – in fact, it can help you focus on an upcoming deadline or presentation, or cope with a tense situation. But when anxiety is severe, symptoms continue for several weeks, and it leads to an excessive, irrational dread of everyday situations that interferes with normal activities. Anxious distress can snowball into a crippling disorder.
Anxiety disorders are serious illnesses of the brain. When they are not treated, anxiety disorders can negatively affect a person’s personal relationships or ability to work or study. In the most severe cases, they can make even regular and daily activities such as shopping, cooking or going outside incredibly difficult. Further, anxiety disorders can lead to low self-esteem, substance abuse, and isolation from one’s friends and family.
People with anxiety disorders believe danger lurks around every corner, and that something terrible will happen if certain things aren't done a certain way. This perception of feeling threatened or in harm's way sends their bodies’ natural “fight or flight” mechanism into overdrive. This response can prompt a genuine physical reaction to everyday people, places or things. This leaves them in a constant state of feeling keyed-up and on edge.
Unlike the relatively mild, brief anxiety caused by a stressful event (such as speaking in public or going on a first date), anxiety disorders last at least six months and can worsen if not treated. Anxiety symptoms are real and nothing to be ashamed of. Futhermore, they can be treated effectively.
There are three major types of anxiety disorders:
Each anxiety disorder has different symptoms, but they all revolve around excessive, irrational fear and dread. Other recognized anxiety disorders include separation anxiety, specific phobias, and substance/medication-induced anxiety disorder.
+ Signs and Symptoms
+ How Common are Anxiety Disorders?
+ Diagnosis
+ Treatment
+ Co-occurring Conditions
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is characterized by persistent, excessive and unrealistic worry about everyday things. People with the disorder experience chronic, exaggerated worry and tension. They often expect the worst, even when there is no apparent reason for concern. They anticipate disaster and are overly concerned about money, health, family, work or other issues. Other times, the source of the worry is hard to pinpoint.
Sometimes just the thought of getting through the day triggers anxiety. Individuals affected don’t know how to stop the worry cycle and feel it is beyond their control, even though they usually realize that their anxiety is more intense than the situation warrants – that it’s irrational. Yet the anxiety is frequently sufficient to also cause fatigue, headaches, nausea and other physical symptoms.
In contrast to those with other anxiety disorders, people with GAD don’t typically avoid certain situations as a result of their disorder. When their anxiety level is mild, they can function in social settings and the workforce. However, if severe, GAD can be debilitating, making even the most routine daily activities seem overwhelming.
+ How Common is Generalized Anxiety Disorder?
+ Signs and Symptoms
+ Treatment
+ Co-occurring Conditions
Panic Disorder
Characterized by “panic attacks,” panic disorder results in sudden feelings of terror that can strike anytime, anywhere, repeatedly and often without warning – even while asleep. While most attacks average a couple of minutes, occasionally they can go on for up to 10 minutes. In rare cases, they may last an hour or more. These episodes of intense fear are accompanied by physical symptoms such as chest pain, heart palpitations, breathlessness, dizziness or intestinal distress. Panic disorder drives more people to seek medical attention than any other anxiety disorder.
Some people with this disorder experience unrealistic worry and live in fear of having more panic attacks. They become very ashamed and self-conscious, and avoid places where they have previously had an attack. They may be unable to work, drive, go to school, shop for groceries, see friends, or conduct activities of daily living. Approximately one-third of individuals who suffer from panic disorder become so consumed with fear that they cannot leave their homes or other safe surroundings, a condition known as agoraphobia. The good news is that early treatment of panic disorder can often stop the progression to agoraphobia. In fact, most people with panic disorder get better with treatment.
+ How Common is Panic Disorder?
+ Signs and Symptoms
+ Diagnosis
+ Co-occurring Conditions
+ Treatment
Social Anxiety Disorder / Social Phobia
Social Anxiety Disorder (also known as social phobia) is a strong fear of being judged by others and of being embarrassed. This fear can be so strong that it gets in the way of work, school or doing other everyday things. People with social anxiety disorder often have an irrational fear of being humiliated in public for “saying something stupid,” or “not knowing what to say.”
Everyone has felt anxious or embarrassed at one time or another. Meeting new people or giving a public speech can make anyone nervous. But people with social anxiety disorder worry about these and other things for weeks before they happen.
Those affected are afraid of doing common things in front of other people. For example, they might be afraid to sign a check in front of a cashier at the grocery store; eat or drink in front of other people, or use a public restroom. Most of these individuals know that their fear is excessive, but they can't control it. So they avoid going to places or events where they think they might have to do something that will embarrass them.
For some, social anxiety is a problem only in specific situations. For example, they may be extremely fearful of talking to a salesperson or speaking in public. Others can have symptoms in almost any social setting, and around anyone except their own family. They can literally feel sick from fear where most people see no threat. Children with social anxiety are prone to clinging behavior, tantrums, and even mutism.
+ How Common is Social Anxiety Disorder?
+ Signs and Symptoms
+ Co-Occurring Conditions
+ Treatment
Sources:
National Institute of Mental Health
National Alliance on Mental Illness
The Kim Foundation
Anxiety Disorders Association of America