Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders can affect your daily life activities and may
worsen if immediate treatment is not given.
Is there
anything that makes you worry lately? It is completely normal to
worry about things in life like your hectic schedules, rocky
relationships, job interviews, and the many things our complicated
life brings us. But, if the worries become too much that you may
feel so choked up and that you are not in control of your life
anymore, they might be symptoms of anxiety disorders.
Anxiety
disorders are affecting people age 18 years and above, causing them
to be filled with fear and uncertainty. It is defined as excessive
anxiety and worry, happening more days than not for at least 6
months and can get worse if they are not treated. The person with
anxiety disorder finds it difficult to control his/her anxiety.
Anxiety disorders usually occur along with other mental or physical
illnesses, including drug or alcohol abuse, to mask the symptoms or
worsen them. Each anxiety disorder has different symptoms, but all
the symptoms cluster around excessive, unreasonable fear and dread.
Some of the
common types of anxiety disorders are separation anxiety, social
anxiety or phobia, selective mutism, panic disorder, posttraumatic
stress disorder (PST), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD),
agoraphobia, generalized anxiety disorder, and specific phobia.
Separation Anxiety is an excessive anxiety
relating to separation from home or someone you are so attached
with. The symptoms mostly relate to the recurrent fear of being
separated from someone or something you are so attached with and
accompanied by physical symptoms like nausea, stomachaches,
headaches, or chest pain.
Social
Anxiety disorder, also called social
phobia, is diagnosed when you become overwhelmingly anxious and
extremely fearful of social interactions. People with this illness
have intense, persistent, and constant fear of being watched and
judged, and other things that can put them in an embarrassing
position. They can worry for days before the actual situation takes
place and this feeling may worsen.. interfering with work, school,
and other activities.
Selective mutism is the consistent failure
to speak in a specific social situation where speech is anticipated
inspite of be able to speak in other situations. According to
research, there is a relation between social phobia and selective
mutism.
OCD
is an anxiety disorder where a person has
recurrent and unwanted ideas or impulses (called obsessions), and an
urge or compulsion to do something to relieve their discomfort
caused by obsession. A person with OCD has senseless, repetitive,
distressing, and sometimes harmful habits that are also difficult to
overcome.
PTSD
is a debilitating condition that follows a terrifying event.
Usually, people with posttraumatic stress disorder have persistent
frightening thoughts and memories of their ordeal and feel
emotionally numb even with people they used to be so closed with.
The signs and symptoms usually appear within 3 months of the tragic
event.
Panic
disorder has brief episodes of intense
fear and is accompanied by various physical symptoms like heart
palpitations, nausea, chest pain, etc., that occur repeatedly and
not knowingly in the absence of external threat.
Agoraphobia is an incapacitating fear for
open spaces. It is a disorder characterized by avoidance of crowds
and open and public spaces. Agoraphobia can lead to extreme anxiety
and evasion, resulting a sufferer to become housebound.
General
anxiety disorder is characterized by
diffused feelings of apprehensions with physiological symptoms. It
is one of the most common anxiety disorders and is described as
excessive anxiety and worry about two or more life circumstances for
a period of six months.
Specific phobia is an intense fear for
specific things or situations like, heights, water, closed-in
places, spiders, and many others.
These anxiety
disorders are curable. The sooner you are diagnosed, the sooner
you’ll get better. So, if you think you have symptoms of anxiety
disorders, don’t hesitate to see a doctor. Don’t let anxiety
disorders ruin your life.
Back to Anxiety