Anxiety & Panic Attacks Symptoms
http://www.npadnews.com/anxiety-symptoms.asp
Good Morning,
I must begin with a few words to someone who believes they know everything.
A SPECIAL NOTE TO OFFENSIVE PERSON...
know that your words have cut deep.
Although I realize the following options might not fit with your ego, please try them anyway.
Either let me know when you become a "doctor"
OR
after you have walked that proverbial mile in my shoes.
XOXO
Me
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From the above link now...
It is not important to try and understand the physiology of the human body but it IS important to remember that each of the anxiety symptoms you experience can be explained.
Do not dwell on what you are feeling, instead, project yourself into more useful subjects, do something constructive, exercise, learn a skill or craft and escape the body trap.
The following list of anxiety symptoms includes the most common ones reported by actual anxiety sufferers. Whilst the list is fairly comprehensive, there may be symptoms that you experience that are not listed; this does not mean that you are more ill or suffering from something else, we are all biologically different in many ways and some people simply react differently during anxiety.
Anxiety Symptoms
* Smothering sensations and Shortness of breath
* Racing heart, slow heart beat, palpitations
* Chest Pain
* Lump in throat & Difficulty swallowing
* Skin losing color (blanching)
* Sweating
* Shaking or shivering (Visibly or internally)
* Neck & shoulder pain & numbness in face or head
* Rapid gastric emptying
* Indigestion, heartburn, constipation and diarrhea
* Symptoms of urinary tract infection
* Skin rashes
* Weakness in arms & tingling in the hands or feet
* Electric shock feeling anywhere in the body
* Dry mouth
* Insomnia
* Nightmares
* Fears of going mad or losing control
* Increased depression & suicidal feelings
* Aggression
* Symptoms like 'flu'
* Distorted vision
* Disturbed hearing
* Hormone problems
* Headaches & feelings of having a tight band around head
* Sore eyes
* Agoraphobia
* Hallucinations
* Creeping or pins and needles sensations in the skin
* Increased sensitivity to light, sound, touch, and smell
* Hyperactivity
* Dramatic increase in sexual feelings
* Pain in the face or jaw that resembles a toothache
* Derealization and depersonalization
Smothering sensations and Shortness of breath
These sensations are amongst the more distressing anxiety symptoms. Sometimes it feels as if your chest will not expand to accommodate the air your body needs, other times it feels as if someone is pushing a pillow into your face. The one thing to remember should you experience this is that it is only a sensation caused by exaggerated nerve impulses. These symptoms will not and cannot harm you; you will not stop breathing, pass out or suffocate.
Racing heart, slow heart beat, palpitations
Anxiety releases adrenaline into the blood stream making the heart race and feel as if it is missing beats, (palpitations). This is perfectly natural and will not and cannot harm you in any way. Later I will discuss methods you can use to help stop these feelings. A slow heart beat is also a common feature of anxiety, again it does not mean that your heart will stop beating, it may feel odd and alarming but again do not give it any credibility and it will go away.
Chest Pain
Caused by muscle tension, chest pains can make you feel very scared. The initial reaction of anyone with anxiety who gets pains in their chest is that they are dying of a heart attack. This is not true. Heart pain is very different to this pain and very often does not start in the chest. Deep breathing and relaxation exercises are a very effective way of diminishing these unpleasant symptoms. If you can get somebody to massage your upper back, shoulders and chest, it will help to relax tired and achy muscles.
Lump in throat & Difficulty swallowing
Globus Hystericus is the correct term for this symptom. It is caused by the muscles in the throat contracting due to anxiety or stress. Sometimes it feels like you cannot swallow anything and trying to makes it worse. This is another example of a symptom, which will improve if you give it no credibility. It is totally harmless and will not cause you to stop breathing, eating or drinking, it is just very unpleasant.
Skin losing color (blanching)
As blood is diverted to the muscles during the 'fight or flight' response, the fine blood vessels in your skin that gives the skin that pink, healthy color receive reduced blood flow and the skin loses some of its colour. It is not dangerous and will return to normal as the body starts to normalize after an attack. Some people with generalized anxiety can look a little pale most of the time, again this is quite normal and will return to normal.
Sweating
Sweating is a normal bodily reaction and is designed to reduce the body temperature. As the body heats up sweat is released onto it through sweat glands. As the sweat evaporates it takes heat with it, cooling the body. During periods of anxiety the body is preparing itself for either flight or fight and releases sweat to cool the impending exertions. As the anxiety subsides sweat levels return to normal.
Shaking or shivering (Visibly or internally)
We all shake or shiver when we are nervous or cold. Shaking is a normal reaction to fear and/or a drop in body temperature. Shaking occurs when the muscles spasmodically contract creating friction between muscles and other body tissues. This friction creates heat which raises body temperature. During anxiety it is quite normal to experience shaking or shivering. It will pass.
Neck & shoulder pain & numbness in face or head
The blood vessels and nerves, which supply the face and head, originate in the neck and shoulders. Many of these nerves and blood vessels are routed across the head to the face. When the body is under stress these areas of the body are usually the first to become tense. Facial numbness can be very disturbing but is usually nothing to worry about and is usually the result of this tension.
Rapid gastric emptying
This can be a very unpleasant side effect of both anxiety and tranquillizer use. This condition causes the sufferer to feel full very early on in a meal, sometimes making them feel as if they cannot breathe. Then soon after eating they can experience diarrhea and feel as if their whole digestive system is emptying very quickly indeed.
Indigestion, heartburn, constipation and diarrhea
During periods of anxiety the body diverts blood from various parts of the body to the muscle tissues in order to supply them with the oxygen needed by them during the flight or fight response. One of the main areas where blood is used most is around the digestive tract. Blood is sent there to absorb nutrients from the food we eat. As blood is diverted away from the stomach during anxiety, the digestion slows and the muscles around the stomach can become knotted. This can cause indigestion, heartburn and diarrhea or constipation.
Sexual Dysfunction
Impotency, or failure to achieve or maintain an erection, effects many men for many reasons, sometimes there is a physical reason for this but more often than not there is a psychological element.
Symptoms of urinary tract infection
Medication can have many and some times quite obscure side effects including the symptoms of a urinary tract infections. It is always advisable to get these things checked out by your doctor but even if you do have an infection it can be easily treated. Drinking plenty of water is always advisable to maintain good, general health but even more so when the body is under stress.
Skin rashes
Skin rashes, spots or dryness are all very common symptoms of anxiety and stress. It is quite common to get an eczema like rash around the nose, cheeks and forehead. They are nothing to worry about and usually disappear when you start to feel better.
Weakness in arms & tingling in the hands or feet
The flight or fight response is an intense reaction and causes many systems of the body to react. Circulation, blood oxygen and blood carbon dioxide levels change and muscle tension is altered in preparation for action. All of these bodily changes have a profound effect on bodily sensations, feeling week in the extremities, (arms, hands, legs or feet) is one of these sensations.
Tingling is usually caused by the pooling of blood carbon dioxide in the limbs, shaking the hands, arms, legs and feet can help increase circulation to these areas. These symptoms are not harmful and will return to normal. Light exercise is very helpful in reversing these sensations. THEY DO NOT MEAN YOU ARE EXPERIENCING A STROKE OR ANY OTHER NEUROLOGICAL CONDITION!
Electric shock feeling anywhere in the body
The nervous system is a very complex network of electrically charged nerves which are found in every square centimeter of your body, around every organ, muscle and across your skin, the largest organ in the body. Abnormal nerve impulses due to anxiety can cause a vast array of strange sensations; although quite harmless these can be very disturbing.
Dry mouth
As fluids are diverted for use in other parts of the body during anxiety, the mouth becomes dry. Sip water or suck sweets to lubricate your mouth. In extreme cases your doctor can prescribe a liquid to do this but it is expensive. It cannot harm you and will go away after the anxiety subsides.
Insomnia
One of the more distressing effects of anxiety, insomnia is the inability to fall asleep or to remain asleep. It is important to regain regular sleep patterns as lack of sleep can lead to disturbing symptoms. Follow this link to The Linden Method cure for insomnia
Nightmares
Dreams and nightmares tend to mimic what is going on in our daily lives. If we are relaxed and contented we have pleasant dreams and usually do not remember them. If we are disturbed or confused our dreams are more likely to be too. Nightmares are unpleasant but harmless, the more you master good sleep and practice breathing and relaxation exercises the better your dreams will become.
Fears of going mad or losing control
We all have a fear of going mad or losing control but rest assured you are not going mad. Going mad is not a conscious act; those who are suffering from severe mental illness are unaware of their journey into it. You are not going mad. Confused nervous messages to the brain along tired nerves in a tired body do not constitute madness.
Thoughts are an unconscious product of brain activity. If you are anxious, angry, sad or stressed your thoughts are affected, not only by mood, but also by your physical body chemistry. Blood oxygen levels can affect brain activity and the central nervous system, as can many other bodily chemicals like adrenaline, hormones and even vitamins. These un-pleasant thoughts, emotions and totally irrational fears are not harmful to yourself or others. Any thoughts of harming yourself or other people are perceived only. As you body becomes more relaxed and less anxious your thought processes will return to normal.
Increased depression & suicidal feelings
Depression is a word that is commonly misused to describe a variety of conditions. I hear many people in every day life who say, "I am depressed, I feel terrible, I am so fed up". This is, in most cases, not depression. Depression is a series of chemical imbalances that create a clinical illness that has strong links with anxiety disorders and can be a side effect of them. Anxiety has many features of depression and can mimic it quite strongly. When someone goes to the doctor complaining of feeling run down and fed up, it is all too easy to write a prescription for Prozac, Seroxat or another anti-depressant. I wonder how many people are on anti-depressants who just needed to reassess and restructure their lives.
Aggression
When you feel tired, ill, fed up and held back by your condition you are bound to feel angry. One of the main causes of true anger is actually sadness. Think back to a situation that has made you feel anger, if you dissect that event you might find that the true reason for feeling so angry was a feeling of sadness. Aggression is a normal reaction to fear also, the fight or flight response prepares us to either run or fight, sometimes to fight may seem to be the best response.
Symptoms like 'flu'
Influenza causes the body to release anti-bodies into the blood stream to attack the virus. This combination of anti-bodies and infection makes the body feel weak, sweaty and painful. Anxiety can have a similar effect, weakening the muscles, making you clammy and achy. Believe it or not the more you do physically the better this will become.
Distorted vision
In order to prepare the body for impending danger, adrenaline release causes many physical changes. During the anxiety response the body prepares the eyes to notice any slight movements; it does this by dilating the pupils allowing more light to enter. This is why anxious people become more sensitive to bright light and often wear sunglasses to minimize the eyestrain it causes.
Disturbed hearing
This is called tinnitus and is usually experienced as whistling or screeching noises in either or both ears.
Hormone problems
Anxiety can affect various systems of the body, one of which is the endocrine system. This system is responsible for balancing the glands, which secrete hormones in the body. Although these glands secrete the hormones needed by the body, they do not control the levels of these chemicals, this is done by the brain. Disturbed messages in the brain and nervous system can cause slight irregularities in the secretion of these chemicals.
When anxiety levels return to normal so will the hormone levels. There are few examples where these hormones cause serious problems and if they do your doctor can correct them.
Women may find that their menstrual cycle is temporarily effected and men may find that they have mood swings whilst testosterone levels are affected.
Headaches & feelings of having a tight band around head
As discussed earlier, tension in the neck and shoulders can cause immense discomfort, migraine and numbness. The feeling of having a tight band around your head is caused by muscular tension in the sheath of muscles covering the skull. Restricted blood vessels and nerves within this tissue can cause very severe symptoms including pain in the eyes, face and teeth.
Sore eyes
Reduced lubrication in the eyes when body fluids are diverted elsewhere during anxiety causes the eyes to feel sore, dry and painful.
Agoraphobia
Agoraphobia is a natural response to anxiety and self-preservation. If we feel threatened we tend to retreat to somewhere safe, like a tortoise into its shell. In anxiety it is important to gain control of this response as soon as you feel it developing. Avoidance of situations is not an effective tool in the fight against agoraphobia.
Hallucinations
Mostly experienced by people in withdrawal, hallucinations can be very frightening indeed if you do not understand what they are and where they come from. Hallucinations are another example of transient symptoms. If you are in withdrawal they will pass, if you are not in withdrawal consult your doctor, as they may be a side effect of the drugs that you have been prescribed.
Creeping or pins and needles sensations in the skin
The nerve endings in your skin are alive with electrical impulses, these can feel like creeping sensations, pins and needles or tickling, they are the result of confused nerve impulses and cannot harm you.
Increased sensitivity to light, sound, touch, and smell
All of these sensitivities are to prepare your senses to see, smell, hear and feel more when in impending danger during the fight or flight response. All of these feeling are unusual but not dangerous, they are temporary and will return to normal as your anxiety levels reduce.
Hyperactivity
Hyperactivity is a way of describing a range of symptoms that cause you to feel as if you need to talk faster and do things faster. It can make you feel confused and irrational and can make you do things that you would not usually do. This is a common feature of anxiety and drug withdrawal and will pass in time.
Dramatic increase in sexual feelings
As the brain copes with disturbed and confused messages from all around the body, some of the mind's thought processes can become a little distorted or exaggerated. Sexual thoughts and emotions are typically very strong even when in good health, they are what drive the attraction mechanism when we meet people we find attractive and create the sexual feelings we feel for some people.
Pain in the face or jaw that resembles a toothache
The term 'face ache' comes from this feature of anxiety. Most of this symptom is caused by tension, not only in the face, neck and shoulders, which can refer pain to the jaw and teeth, but also in the jaw itself.
Derealization and Depersonalization
These are both symptoms, which affect the way you experience yourself. Derealization is the sensation that you and everything around you is not real or dreamy, as if you are seeing everything through a fog or some kind of filter. It has been noticed that people experience both depersonalization and derealization during panic. It seems that some people dissociate first which then causes panic and derealization.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fortunately for me I actually have a very few of those symptoms. (Fortunately for those around me too),
The information above is to offset any mis/disinformation you may have.
And, it will fit in with my upcoming blog...
XOXO,
Me
Picture from here: http://www.truthism.com/
Also from that site...
"All truth passes through three stages.
First, it is ridiculed.
Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
—Arthur Schopenhauer (German philosopher, 1788-1860)
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All other symptoms, ive always put down to being more stressed than the next person, like im sure a lot of people would. And we all accept stress as...well...difficulty in coping with situations. So many words for so many different bodily reactions. The one here that stands out in my mind is...Electric shock feeling anywhere in the body....I get these, I have go these my whole life..and have always said...im having an adrenalin rush..its so interesting. Some situations we can all bloom with confidence, and others, we can crumble like sand. Do we blame ourselves, or the situation, for the way we are feeling. Or the innability to deal with what i happening. It is good to read things like this for an understanding.
ReplyDeleteSince I really have no experience in this area, this is largely a guess more than anything else, but it seems to me that most of these symptoms are throw backs to the old, and mostly bred out of humans, protective instincts. A lot of animals will experience some of these same symptoms as a warning of impending danger, or after being involved in a dangerous situation. Sort of an adrenalin rush. So maybe this has something to do with a inherited gene that only some families are still passing down to their offspring. Primal instincts are becoming more and more obscure and rare. Here again... just speculating out loud.
ReplyDeleteWell Good morning Sweetie;
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, to thank you SO much for stopping by!
It sounds exactly like what you are having. And am happy that there are people on here that aren't afraid to write of their own experiences too...
I was surprised myself, that a few of these symptoms actually are mirror images to what precedes a migraine for me also.
I have not made the correlation yet; but you can bet your bottom dollar I will be thinking twice the next time I have the aura that predicts a migraine.
Having PTSD, and with due respect to my own anxiety attacks, I never know what will set mine off either. Mostly it is when I am going somewhere. But again, they just happen whether I am at home or not. The "away" ones are worse than here though
XOXO
Anne
.
Sweet RT;
ReplyDeleteAnxiety disorders are a "flight or fight" thing, so you are right on the money with your conclusion.
You are also very lucky to not have them.
And yes, they do run in families.
Once upon a time, when Zoe and I had that counseling session, the counselor looked at Zoe and remarked to take it easy on her assessment of my mental health. (She had tried to point out that these anxiety issues meant I was loony). Although I am loony, that had no bearing on her own ignorance.
ANYWAY, the counselor then informed her hat all of my health problems, (ALL of them), run in families.
If she gets by without any of this, then she is fortunate.
if not, she might be taught a bit of compassion as well.
XOXO
Primal Me
within the last year I have been having panic attacks, my heart races and I feel as though I can not breath, I feel the anxiety building up within me but I just cant calm me down fast enough so I dart, I mean literally scoot out of the situation that is causing the attack, as I mentioned week before last I was in the salon waiting for my turn to get a hair cut I suffered an attack and bolted from the shop. I felt so foolish afterward once I was able to calm down, My family who is so use to be being "the strong one" just does not understand what is happening to me. its very annoying that they think I'm just overreacting about things.
ReplyDeleteSweet Pamela;
ReplyDeleteDo NOT ever feel foolish. We need to get the info out so others can deal with it too.
Maybe copy the link and forward this on to your family? No guarantees, but perhaps then they can be made aware of everything you go through and deal with when it happens.
I bolted from a tanning booth years back. (I have never gone back there). Perhaps one day.
I know about the "strong" thing too.
Maybe that is why Zoe was/is so reluctant to accept this about me.
(And no, this latest anger did not come from Zoe).
XOXO
Me
I think at certain points in our lives , we can all get anxious about certain situations we are in but to have these attacks and a lot of these things happen cannot be very nice and some people have attacks quite often ..
ReplyDeleteWhenever I get nervous about something my stomach gives me the fits and I have experienced a couple of the above symptons many times and then I get more nervous because my tummy is acting the way it is and at times I have cancelled my plans because I am afraid to go because of how I am feeling ..
I have a dear friend who does have panic attacks and my heart goes out to her because they can be very very extreme .. She has called me in the middle of the night having one and I have gone down with her and at times , have had to take her to the emergency room .. Her hubby is on the road alot so she knows she can call on me , I wouldn't want her to be alone like this ..
My friend is on some type of medication now but I am not sure of what it is but it does seem to be helping ..
ReplyDeleteSweetie;
I am glad you are there for your friend. There is no greater sense of security than to know someone still loves ya after all that. (Believe me, you are a godsend to her during those times).
My own Paroxetine (Paxil) has been a gift to me. I had those attacks a lot more than I do now. But the severity when it does happen is just as bad.
You are correct, everybody does get anxious.
I get anxious too. And those times are NOTHING compared to having a full blown attack.
XOXO
Me
I can imagine Anne .. I have never ever had an attack that is severe and I hope I never do .. I have seen what my friend goes through and its very very upsetting to me .. I will always be there for her when I can ..
ReplyDeleteI am glad you don't have many and I wish you didn't have none
With the exception of agoraphobia, increased sexual feelings, hallucinations and nightmares...I pretty much have had all the rest. Maybe anxiety is part of my problems as well.
ReplyDeleteBut...I can only self diagnose since there is no Free health plans yet.
I hate it the way my body seems to be turning on me. It's as if it has a mind of its own. Well...it does, doesn't it!
I have had one or two of these things happen, but I am positive they happened for other reasons. I think the only thing that really caused me anxiety is my fear of needles. I have even been known to pass out a time or two. Although 4 pregnancies have seemed to help me through most of my needle anxiety. I still am un easy about it, but not nearly as bad as I use to be.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteHow lucky your friend is to have you understand without knowing.
I too wish I had no more, no more.
hehehe
XOXO
Me
Sweet PeachieBaby;
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts have always been that you have this too. But not to the extent of all the above.
Gosh, can you nimagine how hard those folks have it that get all the symptoms.
Kind of makes my own pale in comparison. But when it's happening, nothing seems to pale. (Except for me I hear). Casey says I turn really gray in my face.
But even with the blubbers I have, and the back and the anxiety and the migraines, I still like my body. (Just at those times I do not). It does make sense.
XOXO
Me
ReplyDeleteSweet Oka;!
Oh I would die if I were afraid of needles- I would never be able to go in for a shot for my head!
However did you get immunized as a child? (Or were those the times you may have lost a bit of time)?
hehehe
Mom said I got all red in the face like I was ready to scream, and then started giggling!
...That I did that all the time.
Weird.
Glad being pregnant helped you out that way.
XOXO
me
*hugs* sometimes the ignorance of people amazes me...
ReplyDeleteWalk a mile indeed.
Sweet Annie,
ReplyDeleteMy husband was diagnosed severak years ago with anxiety attacks, panic disorders and dysthymia. So I can relate with what yo go through. It's not a pretty sight to see a grown man curled in a ball fighting his own mind. He also has been diagnosed with PTSD. Watching what he goes through really makes me feel for you.
HUGS,
Snotball
Sweet Pea;
ReplyDeleteIgnorance is not a virtue; and like yourself, I am always amazed at what comes out of others mouths.
How I wish to slap the "st00pid" out of them...
(But since I am such a pacifist, I just could not condone such a thing).
hehehe
Why is it that all children are not taught the 'walk a mile' as one of The Golden Rules" ?
XOXO
Me
Sweet SB
ReplyDeleteI have had these for so long now... And of course had told Randy about them as well.
Methinks he "poo~poo~ed" them until one day that he had asked me to bring him to the hospital.
This was after his stroke, and so of course we were both really concerned.
As it turned out, he'd had an anxiety/panic attack.
And I am glad, not only for the obvious reason, but for selfish one as well, that he did have this happen, and that it was panic disorder.
I am sorry for what your husband goes through too.
I do know how he feels- right on down to the tips of my toes.
As mine generally happen as I am driving, (no I have never had an accident), I have never thought to curl up in a ball.
Maybe I shall try that next time. Does it help him at all?
On the way home last night, I actually broke a tooth I was clenching so hard.
Oddly enough that little "crrrrack" gave me a few short moments of "uh~oh"- And I got back here before anything bad happened. And by then I could really respect how my back felt.
(Vicious damn cycle if you ask me)...
XOXO
Me
no clue. I was taught that. I taught my kid that.
ReplyDeleteThere are times I want to shake people until their eyeballs rattle but I couldn't do that either but I REALLY REALLY want to.
XOXOXOOx
Pea