What is Mental Illness?
Panic Disorders
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Causes • Signs & Symptoms • Related
Conditions • Treatments •
Living with Panic Disorder • How
Family & Friends Can
Help
Panic disorder, one in the family of anxiety disorders, is different
from normal anxiety. While other anxiety disorders cause ongoing
feelings of fear of impending doom, panic disorder is marked
by sudden, unexpected attacks of intense terror. Panic attacks
can occur at any time, distinguishing them from the natural reaction
to real danger.
Some symptoms of the illness are common not only to other mental
disorders but to minor physical ailments as well. Therefore,
panic disorder can be difficult to recognize, and many sufferers
go untreated. But treatment is available, and it's the only way
to beat the disorder.
Causes
As with other mental illnesses, panic disorder is believed to
be caused by both chemical imbalances in the brain and genetic
predisposition. Panic disorder can afflict people after age 18,
irrespective of race or gender. Researchers are also examining
environmental triggers. For many, panic attacks occur when there
is no apparent danger or outside of periods of normal stress,
and it is believed that certain traumatic events can give rise
to panic disorder.
Signs and Symptoms
People who suffer from panic disorder will have sudden, unexpected
episodes of intense terror that include several of the following
physical symptoms:
* Trembling
* Tingling or numbness
* Nausea or stomach aches
* Racing heartbeat or heart palpitations
* Chest pressure or discomfort
* Choking sensation
* Hyperventilation or difficulty breathing
* Hot or cold flashes
* Dizziness or faintness
* Excessive sweating
* Derealization
* Fear of dying
During a panic attack victims might have the urge to flee but
are too scared to move. They might fear they are having a heart
attack or stroke, that they are going crazy or losing control,
or that they are going to die.
Related Conditions
Panic disorder often has a dramatic impact on victims' lives
and gives rise to other mental illnesses and negative behaviors.
Victims might begin to avoid places or circumstances where panic
attacks have occurred, thinking that these might have caused
their attacks. This leads to a phobic avoidance of these places
or circumstances.
Panic attacks are difficult to endure. Because they can happen
at any time, victims cannot necessarily prepare themselves. This
fear of going through another attack can lead to anticipatory
anxiety.
Often panic disorder victims retreat into a life of isolation,
too afraid even to leave their own homes. Ultimately, this makes
normal living impossible.
And in many cases another common disorder occurs in depression.
Treatments
Because so many of the physical symptoms are common to other
mental and medical conditions, choosing a physician is a very
important step in seeking treatment for panic disorder. A psychiatrist
is a specialist who understands mental illnesses, who can make
an appropriate diagnosis and who can prescribe a proper treatment
and is probably the best choice. A proper diagnosis in the beginning
can eliminate ineffective treatments and patient frustration.
The most effective treatments usually include medication, cognitive
and behavioral therapy, or a combination of these.
Medication helps level the chemical imbalances in the brain.
Some prescriptions that have proven effective are tricyclic antidepressants,
MAO inhibitors and benzodiazepines. These help prevent attacks
or reduce their frequency and severity.
Cognitive and behavior therapies are designed to change the
way a person thinks and acts. Cognitive therapy involves helping
patients understand how their thinking patterns contribute to
their symptoms and how to change their thoughts to reduce or
prevent the symptoms. In behavioral therapy, psychiatrists expose
patients to the feared place or situation on a gradual basis,
teaching them to use relaxation exercises, until the fear is
reduced or eliminated.
Group therapy brings patients together to share experiences
and draw support from one another. Many patients respond well
to treatment, and the success rates among those who receive treatment
is often very high, allowing patients to return to productive,
fulfilling lives.
Living with Panic Disorder
When panic disorder strikes, it reaches far beyond its victims.
Family members, friends, co-workers and many others suffer as
well. But family and friends can potentially be the best help
for victims.
Dealing with a relative or friend with panic disorder can be
stressful. Family and friends can find emotional support, understanding
and hope from outreach, education and advocacy groups.
How Family and Friends Can Help
One of the greatest helps to a friend or loved one with a disorder
is emotional support. Family and friends should sincerely listen
to the person with the disorder, offering reassurance. They can
help the person become involved in his or her own treatment.
They can be the rational, stable support in the difficult and
frustrating times.
Dealing with a relative or friend with panic disorder can be
stressful. Family and friends can find emotional support, understanding
and hope from outreach, education and advocacy groups
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