Panic Attack Symptoms
- Pounding heart
- Chest pains
- Lightheadedness or dizziness
- Nausea or stomach problems
- Flushes or chills
- Shortness of breath or a feeling of smothering or choking
- Tingling or numbness
- Shaking or trembling
- Feelings of unreality
- Terror
- A feeling of being out of control or going crazy
- Fear of dying
- Sweating
People who suffer from a panic disorder feel a terror that strikes
suddenly and repeatedly with no warning. They cannot predict when
an attack will occur, and many develop intense anxiety between
episodes, worrying when and where the next one will strike. In
between times there is a persistent, lingering worry that another
attack could come any minute.
Panic disorder is quite a common disorder, twice as common in
women as in men. It can appear at any age – in children
or in the elderly – but most often it begins in young adults.
Not everyone who experiences panic attacks will develop panic
disorder. Many people have one attack but never have another.
For those who do have panic disorder, though, it's important to
seek treatment.
Panic disorder is often accompanied by other conditions such
as depression or alcoholism, and may spawn phobias, which can
develop in places or situations where panic attacks have occurred.
Some people's lives become greatly restricted – they avoid
normal, everyday activities such as grocery shopping, driving,
or in some cases even leaving the house. They avoid any situation
they fear would make them feel helpless if a panic attack occurs.
Agoraphobia develops in approximately one-third of Panic Disorder
sufferers. Whilst this disorder can appear to run in families,
early treatment of panic disorder can often stop the progression
to agoraphobia.
Psychotherapy, Hypnotherapy, Neuro Linguistic Programming and
similar methods of intervention have proven successful treatments
for people suffering from a Panic Disorder. Cognitive-behavioural
approaches teach patients how to view the panic situations differently
and demonstrate ways to reduce anxiety, using breathing exercises
or techniques to refocus attention, for example. Hypnotherapy
and Neuro Linguistic Programming aid clients to become desensitised
to their fearful situation. The client uses imagination to slowly
become exposed to the fearful situation until they become desensitised
to it.
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