19th December, 2008 - Posted by Andy - No Comments
Introduction
Panic attacks are extremely frightening. They seem to come out of the blue, strike at random, make people feel powerless, out of control, and as if they are about to die or go mad. Many people experience this problem, but many also learn to cope and, eventually, to overcome it successfully.
A panic attack is an exaggeration of the body’s normal response to fear, stress or excitement. When faced with a situation seen as potentially threatening, the body automatically gears itself up for danger, by producing quantities of adrenalin for ‘fight or flight’. This would have prepared our cave-dwelling ancestors to fight or run away from danger, but it’s much less appropriate to the stresses we encounter today.
When adrenalin floods your body, it can cause a number of different physical and emotional sensations that may affect you during a panic attack. A high level of adrenalin is not in itself a bad thing. It can give you the extra energy to deal with difficult demands and challenges. The damage is done when the levels of adrenalin don’t fall, naturally, after a stressful event. Stress becomes prolonged and tension becomes a habit.
These reactions occur in a matter of seconds, and can happen in moments of pleasurable excitement, as well as in fear-provoking and threatening situations. These sensations may include:
- Muscles tense up, as blood is diverted to them, away from areas that don’t need it, so you become pale.
- The heart pumps harder to get blood to where it’s needed.
- Digestion slows down and salivary glands dry up, causing a dry mouth.
- Your senses become more alert; the slightest sound or touch provokes a reaction.
- Very rapid breathing or feeling unable to breathe
- Very rapid heartbeat
- Pains in your chest
- Feeling faint or dizzy
- Sweating
- Ringing in your ears
- Tingling or numbness in your hands and feet
- Hot or cold flushes
- Feeling nauseous
- Wanting to go to the toilet
- Feelings of absolute terror
- Feelings of unreality, called depersonalisation and de-realisation.
During depersonalisation, people feel detached from their body and surroundings, strange and unreal. During de-realisation, they feel grounded in themselves, but the world seems distant or strange, and they may feel unsteady on their feet.
Panic attacks come on very quickly, symptoms usually peaking within 10 minutes. Most panic attacks last for between five and 20 minutes. Some people report attacks lasting for up to an hour, but they are likely to be experiencing one attack after another, or a high level of anxiety after the initial attack. You may have one or two panic attacks and never experience another. Or you may have attacks once a month or several times each week.
One’s night time is similarly susceptible to panic attacks and occur as your body is on ‘high alert’ and can detect small, normal changes in your body which it then takes as a sign of danger. (The fact that you can be monitoring your bodily sensations while asleep is perfectly normal and automatic – just think about the times you have woken up and needed to go to the toilet.) Night-time attack may be particularly frightening, as you may feel confused and helpless to do anything to spot it coming. This is one of the most distressing aspects of suffering from panic attacks – they may seem completely unpredictable, and therefore uncontrollable.
During an attack, you may fear that the world is going to come to an end, or that you are about to die or go mad. The most important thing to remember is that, however dreadful you may feel during an attack, this is not going to happen. The bodily effects of panic attacks, such as breathlessness, are just part of the panic. If you would like further reassurance, see your GP, so he or she can rule out any physical cause for your symptoms.
PSYCHOLOGICAL CAUSES OF PANIC ATTACKS
There are many physical and psychological factors, which may be interwoven. You may experience panic only in response to a particular situation, such as flying or visiting the dentist. Or you may feel perfectly fine during a stressful event, but may have an attack later. This is because adrenalin levels don’t drop straight away. Any major life changes and events can trigger panic attacks.
Agoraphobia and similar problems
You may start to associate particular places and situations with having an attack. In an attempt to avoid another one, you may steer clear of places where attacks have previously occurred. But this may put more and more restrictions on your day-to-day activities, and could lead to agoraphobia or social phobia. As you feel more out of control and restrict your activities, your enjoyment of life and your self-confidence is undermined. Many people who experience panic attacks become very depressed.
Childhood influences
Incidents in childhood, and the way you were brought up and taught to think about yourself, can make you vulnerable to panic attacks later on. If you experienced great fear at being separated from a parent, you may have gone on to develop school phobia. As an adult, you may then have panic attacks when threatened with the loss of a support system or of someone who is important to you. Adult survivors of abuse in childhood also frequently suffer panic attacks.
Personality traits
If you are always anxious, you are more likely to have panic attacks. Being over-critical and disapproving of yourself, and striving to conform to the expectations of others, is common in people who panic. You may have difficulties in expressing your own needs and asserting yourself.
PHYSICAL CAUSES OF PANIC ATTACKS
There are a number of physical causes that could be causing or contributing to your panic attacks:
- Unstable blood sugar levels (hypoglycaemia) can be the result of poor eating habits, dieting and fasting.
- Over-breathing (hyperventilation) happens when you are under stress, though you may not be aware of it. Your breathing becomes more rapid, in order to meet the body’s demand for more oxygen for the muscles. As a result, you breathe out more carbon-dioxide than normal, which can bring on panic symptoms.
- Digestive problems, particularly food allergies, may be to blame.
- Taking antidepressants, particularly the newer ones, may produce panic attacks, especially at first.
- Caffeine, cigarettes, alcohol, and certain street drugs (such as LSD, marijuana and cocaine) can bring on a panic reaction. Withdrawing from any drug that has a sedative effect, such as nicotine, alcohol and tranquillisers, can do the same.
- Some prescription medication, including some amphetamines, steroids, anti-asthma drugs, and even nasal decongestants have been reported to increase anxiety.
- Sometimes, problems with the way the brain works (known as organic brain dysfunction) will cause balance, coordination and visual difficulties that make people very vulnerable to stress, and may contribute to agoraphobia.
- Being in chronic pain can be another cause of panic attacks, as can simple jet lag.
HELPING YOURSELF
Your panic attacks are likely to make you feel out of control and dependent; the victim of your bodily reactions and outside circumstances. The first step along the road to recovery is recognising that you have the power to control your symptoms.
Take control
Start by really looking, in detail, at your panic attacks. When did they happen? Where were you? What were you thinking? See if you can identify particular thoughts that trigger a panic reaction.
A number of experts have emphasised the need to accept the panic attacks when they occur and that it may in fact be most helpful if you try and ride out the attacks to learn that no harm will come to you. This may sound strange, but fighting them only increases your level of fear and allows your panic to take on tremendous proportions. Accept that a panic attack is unpleasant and embarrassing, but that it isn’t life-threatening or the end of the world. By going with the panic, you are reducing its power to terrify you.
Creative visualisation and affirmations
Creative visualisation and affirmations are techniques that may be helpful. You can use them to re-train your imagination and to get yourself moving in a more positive direction.
Many people who suffer panic attacks have a vivid imagination, which they use to conjure up disaster, illness and death. You can train your imagination to focus on situations that give you a sense of wellbeing. You can imagine you are in a place that symbolises peace and relaxation for you, such as drifting on a lake. You can practise this anywhere but, until you have got used to doing this, try sitting in a chair with your limbs as floppy as possible, and think of calming images.
You can use visualisation to focus on situations that you fear. Imagine the situation and speak positively to yourself: ‘I am doing well’, ‘This is easy’. These simple, positive, present-tense affirmations are messages that you can say silently or out loud. These techniques do not provide a quick fix. If you have been used to thinking negatively, over a long period of time, you will need to practise every day. You may then gradually notice positive changes in the way you think of yourself and others.
Assertiveness
You may be having panic attacks because there are aspects of your life that are undermining your confidence. It may be useful to look at your family life, your job, and so on, and identify changes you would like to make. If you feel trapped in a situation, and find it very difficult to express your true feelings (to say ‘no’ or to set proper limits in relationships, for example), you may find assertiveness training helpful.
Learn a relaxation technique
If you habitually clench your jaw, and your shoulders are up around your ears, this will generate further tension. Relaxation techniques focus on easing muscle tension and slowing down your breathing. It helps your mind to relax.
Breathing
Hyperventilation (over-breathing) commonly leads to panic attacks. Many people get into the habit of breathing shallowly, from the upper chest, rather than more slowly from the abdomen. Put one hand on your upper chest and the other on your stomach. Notice which hand moves as you breathe. The hand on your chest should hardly move, if you are breathing correctly from the diaphragm, but the hand on your stomach should rise and fall. Practise this breathing, slowly and calmly, every day.
Diet
Unstable blood sugar levels can contribute to symptoms of panic. Eat regularly and avoid sugary foods and drinks, white flour and junk food. Instead, choose complex carbohydrates, such as potatoes, rice and pasta. Caffeine, alcohol and smoking all contribute to panic attacks and are best avoided.
First aid
If you are having a panic attack, try cupping your hands over your nose and mouth, or holding a paper bag (not plastic!) and breathing into it, for about 10 minutes. This should raise the level of carbon-dioxide in the bloodstream and relieve symptoms.
Other first-aid tips include running on the spot during a panic attack. If you feel unreal, carry an object, such as the photograph of a loved one, to anchor you in reality, or finger a heavily textured object, such as a strip of sandpaper. You could also distract yourself, by trying to focus on what is going on around you.
EFFECTIVE THERAPIES
Drug therapy
The NICE (National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) guidelines on the treatment of anxiety state that benzodiazepine tranquillisers, such as diazepam (Valium), are associated with a sub optimal outcome in the long-term and should not be used to treat panic disorder. If drug treatment is used, SSRI antidepressants, such as Prozac, should be used first, and if these are not effective, the tricyclic antidepressants imipramine or clomipramine (Anafranil) may be tried instead. SSRI antidepressants are difficult to come off for many people, so when you are ready to stop taking them, you should always withdraw slowly. When starting antidepressants, the side effects may include anxious, jittery feelings. The longer you are on them, the more likely you are to experience withdrawal symptoms, which can cause panic attacks.
Psychotherapy
Emotional conflicts and past difficulties may lead to anxiety, which is released through panic attacks. Without realising it, you may be experiencing these bodily sensations and physical reactions as a way of avoiding painful emotions. Psychotherapy can help you to understand your present reactions in the light of past difficulties, and to overcome them.
Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)
Our thoughts have a very powerful impact on our behaviour. You may be unaware of seemingly automatic thoughts and misinterpretations that provoke attacks. This is because thoughts happen so quickly and may take the form of images and sensations, rather than words. The way we interpret things can cause extreme distress. But it is possible to bring about a state of wellbeing by changing habitual thought patterns. If we think that our racing heart is a sign of a possible heart attack we’ll be very frightened, but if we think that it is due to excitement or too much coffee, we’ll feel very differently about it.
CBT aims to identify and change the negative thought patterns and misinterpretations that are feeding your panic attacks. If you are interested in this kind of therapy, ask your GP to refer you to a clinical psychologist. It’s also possible to apply self-help techniques.
Behaviour Therapy
Many people develop a pattern of avoiding situations that have previously provoked a panic attack. They may become withdrawn and phobic. A clinical psychologist can address the problem using behavioural therapy. The therapy concentrates on encouraging you to imagine anxiety-provoking situations, at the same time as practising relaxation. You will be encouraged to confront your fears, in fantasy, and then move on to facing your fears in reality. In learning to relax and face up to feared situations, you will unlearn your feelings of panic.
Complementary and alternative therapies
Complementary and alternative therapies have proved to be helpful when people are experiencing stress-related symptoms, anxiety and depression. They can be a useful tool in promoting relaxation and inducing a state of wellbeing. Complementary health practitioners stress the connections between mind and body, and aren’t concerned with merely treating symptoms. There is an enormous number of different therapies: acupuncture, aromatherapy, autogenic training and homeopathy, to name but a few.
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[Sources: MIND, NHS Direct, NIH]
Tags: attacks, blood sugar, chest pains, dizzy, faint, numb, panic, panic disorder, self help, sweeating, therapy, tingly
Posted on: December 19, 2008
Filed under: General, Teen Health
13th December, 2008 - Posted by Andy - No Comments
INTRODUCTION
Everyone experiences some unhappiness, often as a result of a change, either in the form of a setback or a loss, or simply, as Freud said, “everyday misery.” The painful feelings that accompany these events are usually appropriate, necessary, and transitory, and can even present an opportunity for personal growth. However, when depression persists and impairs daily life, it may be an indication of a depressive disorder. Severity, duration, and the presence of other symptoms are the factors that distinguish normal sadness from a depressive disorder.
Depression has been alluded to by a variety of names in both medical and popular literature for thousands of years. Early English texts refer to “melancholia,” which was for centuries the generic term for all emotional disorders.
Depression is now referred to as a mood disorder, and the primary subtypes are major depression, dysthymia (chronic and usually milder depression), and atypical depression. Other important forms of depression are premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PDD or PMDD) and seasonal affective disorder (SAD). Bipolar disorder, also known as manic-depressive illness, is considered in a separate category.
MAJOR DEPRESSION
In major, or acute, depression, at least five of the symptoms listed below must occur for a period of at least 2 weeks, and they must represent a change from previous behaviour or mood. Depressed mood or loss of interest must be present. Symptoms are:
1. Depressed mood on most days for most of each day — irritability may be prominent in children and adolescents
2. Total or very noticeable loss of pleasure most of the time
3. Significant increases or decreases in appetite, weight, or both
4. Sleep disorders, either insomnia or excessive sleepiness, nearly every day
5. Feelings of agitation or a sense of intense slowness
6. Loss of energy and a daily sense of tiredness
7. Sense of guilt or worthlessness nearly all the time
8. Inability to concentrate occurring nearly every day
9. Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
In addition, other criteria must be met:
The symptoms listed above do not follow or accompany manic episodes (such as in bipolar disorder or other disorders). They impair important normal functions (such as work or personal relationships).
- They are not caused by drugs, alcohol, or other substances.
- They are not caused by normal grief.
A long-term study found that episodes of major depression usually last about 20 weeks. Between 30 - 40% of depressed patients experience sudden attacks of anger that they describe as uncharacteristic and inappropriate.
Dysthymia (Chronic Depression)
Dysthymia, or chronic depression, afflicts 3 - 6% of the general population and is characterized by many of the same symptoms that occur in major depression. Symptoms of dysthymia are less intense and last much longer, at least 2 years. The symptoms of dysthymia have been described as a “veil of sadness” that covers most activities. Possibly because of the duration of the symptoms, patients who suffer from chronic minor depression do not exhibit marked changes in mood or in daily functioning, although they have low energy, a general negativity, and a sense of dissatisfaction and hopelessness.
Double Depression
Often, symptoms become more severe over time. In one long-term study, nearly all patients with dysthymia suffered at least one episode of major depression superimposed over chronic depression (sometimes called double depression) at some time in their life. Some experts believe that such double depression should be considered as part of the natural course of dysthymic disorder. Women may be more susceptible to double depression. In one study, more than one-third of those who recovered from dysthymia relapsed within 5 years.
Atypical Depression
About a third of patients with depression have atypical depression. Symptoms include overeating and oversleeping. Such patients tend to have a feeling of being weighed down and react strongly to rejection. It tends to occur more in women, unmarried people, and those with other emotional disorders, such as anxiety or substance abuse. It also may impair functioning more severely than ordinary depression does.
Seasonal Affective Disorder
Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is characterized by annual episodes of depression during fall or winter that remit in the spring or summer. Other SAD symptoms include fatigue, a tendency to overeat (particularly carbohydrates) and to oversleep in winter. A minority of individuals with SAD has the more common depressive symptoms of under eating and being sleepless. SAD tends to last about 5 months in those who live in the northern part of the U.S.
Seasonal changes affect many people’s moods, regardless of gender and whether or not they have SAD. Simply being mildly depressed during the winter does not mean that one has SAD. Living in a northern country with long winter nights does not guarantee a higher risk for depression. Changes in light may not be the only contributor to SAD.
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[Sources: NIH, NHS Direct]
[Compiled 12.08.09]
Tags: Atypical Depression, depression, disorders, Double Depression, Dysthymia, major depression, misery, sads, Seasonal Affective Disorder, unhappy
Posted on: December 13, 2008
Filed under: 60+ Health, General, Teen Health