Causes Of Anxiety Attacks
"Understanding the
causes of your anxiety attacks is crucial. Once you can do
that, you are half way there to treating yourself for
good..."
By Peter Johnson
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There
is a plethora of causes of
anxiety attacks, ranging from
external mental or emotional stimuli to
medical or biological issues. There are
many different things that can cause
anxiety attacks and if you are
experiencing them you need to find out
what the cause is.
First off there
are the medicinal or pharmacological causes.
These include alcohol, marijuana, psilocybin (a
hallucinogen found in a few mushrooms),
stimulants such as caffeine or nicotine,
amphetamines, and side effects from
antidepressants such as Ritalin (especially at
the beginning of use or when a patient is being
weaned off the drug). Some who suffer from
anxiety attacks also report a phobia of certain
drugs, which may psychosomatically cause
attacks if they are prescribed.
Emotional or mental issues include
avoidance of with anxiety-provoking
environments or situations and association of
the same, generalized anxiety, lack of
assertiveness, mistaken beliefs, obsessive
compulsive disorder (OCD),
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phobias, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), significant
life changes or personal loss (such as loss of a romantic
partner), “what-if” thinking, and withheld feelings.
The many biological causes of anxiety attacks include
hypoglycemia, hyperthyroidism, inner ear disturbances
(labyrinthitis), pheochromocytoma (an adrenal gland tumor),
hyperventilation syndrome, Wilson's disease (a genetic
disorder), and a prolapsed mitral valve (a type of heart
disease). A deficiency of vitamin B caused by a poor diet or
from parasitic tapeworm infection can also serve as
triggers.
Even your heredity may be to blame. Anxiety attacks have
been known to be passed down through families; so many mental
health professionals conclude that the trait for attacks may be
found to be present in the human genome. Studies on genetically
identical twins, on the other hand, have shown that oftentimes
one twin will have anxiety attacks and the other twin will not.
Anxiety attacks can also be inherited in a roundabout way
through an overly cautious worldview expressed by a patient’s
parents and the collective stress it may cause.
Many different things can trigger anxiety attacks and most
of them have little to do with your personal choices.
Fortunately there are things that you can do to deal with them.
You first have to understand that it is that it is not your
fault that you are having these attacks and that you’re not
“crazy” or abnormal. If your anxiety attacks are found to be
triggered by something that can be fairly easily taken care of,
your problem may be able to be solved quickly. A
lifestyle choice, such as alcohol or marijuana consumption, can
easily be changed. Something that is more intangible,
such as a phobia or genetic issue can be handled by your mental
health professional via counseling or medication.
Conclusion
The one thing you don’t want to do if you are experiencing
anxiety attacks is blame yourself or see yourself as crazy or
abnormal. Together with your mental health professional, you
can discern the root of your anxiety attacks. In just about
every situation, the causes of anxiety attacks
can be quickly figured out and dealt with, allowing you to get
on with your life.
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