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NIH
Publication No. 00-3879
Printed 1994, 1995, 1997. Reprinted 2000.
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Introduction
Anxiety disorders are serious
medical illnesses that affect approximately 19 million
American adults.1 These
disorders fill people's lives with overwhelming anxiety and
fear. Unlike the relatively mild, brief anxiety caused by a
stressful event such as a business presentation or a first
date, anxiety disorders are chronic, relentless, and can
grow progressively worse if not treated.
Effective treatments for anxiety
disorders are available, and research is yielding new,
improved therapies that can help most people with anxiety
disorders lead productive, fulfilling lives. If you think
you have an anxiety disorder, you should seek information
and treatment.
This brochure will
- help you identify the symptoms of
anxiety disorders,
- explain the role of research in
understanding the causes of these conditions,
- describe effective treatments,
- help you learn how to obtain
treatment and work with a doctor or therapist, and
- suggest ways to make treatment
more effective.
The anxiety disorders discussed in
this brochure are
- panic disorder,
- obsessive-compulsive disorder,
- post-traumatic stress disorder,
- social phobia (or social anxiety
disorder),
- specific phobias, and
- generalized anxiety disorder.
Each anxiety disorder has its own
distinct features, but they are all bound together by the
common theme of excessive, irrational fear and dread.
The National Institute of Mental
Health (NIMH) supports scientific investigation into the
causes, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of anxiety
disorders and other mental illnesses. The NIMH mission is to
reduce the burden of mental illness through research on
mind, brain, and behavior. NIMH is a component of the
National Institutes of Health, which is part of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
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"It started 10 years ago,
when I had just graduated from college and started a new
job. I was sitting in a business seminar in a hotel and this
thing came out of the blue. I felt like I was dying.
"For me, a panic attack
is almost a violent experience. I feel disconnected from
reality. I feel like I'm losing control in a very extreme
way. My heart pounds really hard, I feel like I can't get my
breath, and there's an overwhelming feeling that things are
crashing in on me.
"In between attacks there
is this dread and anxiety that it's going to happen again.
I'm afraid to go back to places where I've had an attack.
Unless I get help, there soon won't be anyplace where I can
go and feel safe from panic."
People with panic disorder have
feelings of terror that strike suddenly and repeatedly with
no warning. They can't predict when an attack will occur,
and many develop intense anxiety between episodes, worrying
when and where the next one will strike.
If you are having a panic attack,
most likely your heart will pound and you may feel sweaty,
weak, faint, or dizzy. Your hands may tingle or feel numb,
and you might feel flushed or chilled. You may have nausea,
chest pain or smothering sensations, a sense of unreality,
or fear of impending doom or loss of control. You may
genuinely believe you're having a heart attack or losing
your mind, or on the verge of death.
Panic attacks can occur at any time,
even during sleep. An attack generally peaks within 10
minutes, but some symptoms may last much longer.
Panic disorder affects about 2.4
million adult Americans1 and is
twice as common in women as in men.2
It most often begins during late adolescence or early
adulthood.2 Risk of developing
panic disorder appears to be inherited.3
Not everyone who experiences panic attacks will develop
panic disorder-for example, many people have one attack but
never have another. For those who do have panic disorder,
though, it's important to seek treatment. Untreated, the
disorder can become very disabling.
Many people with panic disorder
visit the hospital emergency room repeatedly or see a number
of doctors before they obtain a correct diagnosis. Some
people with panic disorder may go for years without learning
that they have a real, treatable illness.
Panic disorder is often accompanied
by other serious conditions such as depression, drug abuse,
or alcoholism4,5 and may lead to
a pattern of avoidance of places or situations where panic
attacks have occurred. For example, if a panic attack
strikes while you're riding in an elevator, you may develop
a fear of elevators. If you start avoiding them, that could
affect your choice of a job or apartment and greatly
restrict other parts of your life.
Some people's lives become so
restricted that they avoid normal, everyday activities such
as grocery shopping or driving. In some cases they become
housebound. Or, they may be able to confront a feared
situation only if accompanied by a spouse or other trusted
person.
Basically, these people avoid any
situation in which they would feel helpless if a panic
attack were to occur. When people's lives become so
restricted, as happens in about one-third of people with
panic disorder,2 the condition
is called agoraphobia. Early treatment of panic
disorder can often prevent agoraphobia.
Panic disorder is one of the most
treatable of the anxiety disorders, responding in most cases
to medications or carefully targeted psychotherapy.
You may genuinely believe you're
having a heart attack, losing your mind, or are on the verge
of death. Attacks can occur at any time, even during sleep.
[home]
Depression
Depression often accompanies anxiety disorders4
and, when it does, it needs to be treated as well. Symptoms
of depression include feelings of sadness, hopelessness,
changes in appetite or sleep, low energy, and difficulty
concentrating. Most people with depression can be
effectively treated with antidepressant medications, certain
types of psychotherapy, or a combination of both.
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"I couldn't do
anything without rituals. They invaded every aspect of my
life. Counting really bogged me down. I would wash my hair
three times as opposed to once because three was a good luck
number and one wasn't. It took me longer to read because I'd
count the lines in a paragraph. When I set my alarm at night,
I had to set it to a number that wouldn't add up to a
"bad" number.
"Getting
dressed in the morning was tough because I had a routine, and
if I didn't follow the routine, I'd get anxious and would have
to get dressed again. I always worried that if I didn't do
something, my parents were going to die. I'd have these
terrible thoughts of harming my parents. That was completely
irrational, but the thoughts triggered more anxiety and more
senseless behavior. Because of the time I spent on rituals, I
was unable to do a lot of things that were important to me.
"I knew the
rituals didn't make sense, and I was deeply ashamed of them,
but I couldn't seem to overcome them until I had
therapy."
Obsessive-compulsive
disorder, or OCD, involves anxious thoughts or rituals you
feel you can't control. If you have OCD, you may be plagued by
persistent, unwelcome thoughts or images, or by the urgent
need to engage in certain rituals.
You may be obsessed with
germs or dirt, so you wash your hands over and over. You may
be filled with doubt and feel the need to check things
repeatedly. You may have frequent thoughts of violence, and
fear that you will harm people close to you. You may spend
long periods touching things or counting; you may be
pre-occupied by order or symmetry; you may have persistent
thoughts of performing sexual acts that are repugnant to you;
or you may be troubled by thoughts that are against your
religious beliefs.
The disturbing thoughts
or images are called obsessions, and the rituals that are
performed to try to prevent or get rid of them are called
compulsions. There is no pleasure in carrying out the rituals
you are drawn to, only temporary relief from the anxiety that
grows when you don't perform them.
A lot of healthy people
can identify with some of the symptoms of OCD, such as
checking the stove several times before leaving the house. But
for people with OCD, such activities consume at least an hour
a day, are very distressing, and interfere with daily life.
Most adults with this
condition recognize that what they're doing is senseless, but
they can't stop it. Some people, though, particularly children
with OCD, may not realize that their behavior is out of the
ordinary.
OCD afflicts about 3.3
million adult Americans.1 It
strikes men and women in approximately equal numbers and
usually first appears in childhood, adolescence, or early
adulthood.2 One-third of adults
with OCD report having experienced their first symptoms as
children. The course of the disease is variable-symptoms may
come and go, they may ease over time, or they can grow
progressively worse. Research evidence suggests that OCD might
run in families.3
Depression or other
anxiety disorders may accompany OCD,2,4
and some people with OCD also have eating disorders.6
In addition, people with OCD may avoid situations in which
they might have to confront their obsessions, or they may try
unsuccessfully to use alcohol or drugs to calm themselves.4,5
If OCD grows severe enough, it can keep someone from holding
down a job or from carrying out normal responsibilities at
home.
OCD generally responds
well to treatment with medications or carefully targeted
psychotherapy.
The disturbing thoughts
or images are called obsessions, and the rituals performed to
try to prevent or get rid of them are called compulsions.
There is no pleasure in carrying out the rituals you are drawn
to, only temporary relief from the anxiety that grows when you
don't perform them.
[home]
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"I was raped
when I was 25 years old. For a long time, I spoke about the
rape as though it was something that happened to someone else.
I was very aware that it had happened to me, but there was
just no feeling.
"Then I
started having flashbacks. They kind of came over me like a
splash of water. I would be terrified. Suddenly I was reliving
the rape. Every instant was startling. I wasn't aware of
anything around me, I was in a bubble, just kind of floating.
And it was scary. Having a flashback can wring you out.
"The rape
happened the week before Thanksgiving, and I can't believe the
anxiety and fear I feel every year around the anniversary
date. It's as though I've seen a werewolf. I can't relax,
can't sleep, don't want to be with anyone. I wonder whether
I'll ever be free of this terrible problem."
Post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating condition that can develop
following a terrifying event. Often, people with PTSD have
persistent frightening thoughts and memories of their ordeal
and feel emotionally numb, especially with people they were
once close to. PTSD was first brought to public attention by
war veterans, but it can result from any number of traumatic
incidents. These include violent attacks such as mugging, rape
or torture; being kidnapped or held captive; child abuse;
serious accidents such as car or train wrecks; and natural
disasters such as floods or earthquakes. The event that
triggers PTSD may be something that threatened the person's
life or the life of someone close to him or her. Or it could
be something witnessed, such as massive death and destruction
after a building is bombed or a plane crashes.
Whatever the source of
the problem, some people with PTSD repeatedly relive the
trauma in the form of nightmares and disturbing recollections
during the day. They may also experience other sleep problems,
feel detached or numb, or be easily startled. They may lose
interest in things they used to enjoy and have trouble feeling
affectionate. They may feel irritable, more aggressive than
before, or even violent. Things that remind them of the trauma
may be very distressing, which could lead them to avoid
certain places or situations that bring back those memories.
Anniversaries of the traumatic event are often very difficult.
PTSD affects about 5.2
million adult Americans.1 Women
are more likely than men to develop PTSD.7
It can occur at any age, including childhood,8
and there is some evidence that susceptibility to PTSD may run
in families.9 The disorder is
often accompanied by depression, substance abuse, or one or
more other anxiety disorders.4 In
severe cases, the person may have trouble working or
socializing. In general, the symptoms seem to be worse if the
event that triggered them was deliberately initiated by a
person-such as a rape or kidnapping.
Ordinary events can serve
as reminders of the trauma and trigger flashbacks or intrusive
images. A person having a flashback, which can come in the
form of images, sounds, smells, or feelings, may lose touch
with reality and believe that the traumatic event is happening
all over again.
Not every traumatized
person gets full-blown PTSD, or experiences PTSD at all. PTSD
is diagnosed only if the symptoms last more than a month. In
those who do develop PTSD, symptoms usually begin within 3
months of the trauma, and the course of the illness varies.
Some people recover within 6 months, others have symptoms that
last much longer. In some cases, the condition may be chronic.
Occasionally, the illness doesn't show up until years after
the traumatic event.
People with PTSD can be
helped by medications and carefully targeted psychotherapy.
Ordinary events can
serve as reminders of the trauma and trigger flashbacks or
intrusive images. Anniversaries of the traumatic event are
often very difficult.
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"In any social
situation, I felt fear. I would be anxious before I even left
the house, and it would escalate as I got closer to a college
class, a party, or whatever. I would feel sick at my
stomach-it almost felt like I had the flu. My heart would
pound, my palms would get sweaty, and I would get this feeling
of being removed from myself and from everybody else.
"When I would
walk into a room full of people, I'd turn red and it would
feel like everybody's eyes were on me. I was embarrassed to
stand off in a corner by myself, but I couldn't think of
anything to say to anybody. It was humiliating. I felt so
clumsy, I couldn't wait to get out.
"I couldn't go
on dates, and for a while I couldn't even go to class. My
sophomore year of college I had to come home for a semester. I
felt like such a failure."
Social phobia, also
called social anxiety disorder, involves overwhelming anxiety
and excessive self-consciousness in everyday social
situations. People with social phobia have a persistent,
intense, and chronic fear of being watched and judged by
others and being embarrassed or humiliated by their own
actions. Their fear may be so severe that it interferes with
work or school, and other ordinary activities. While many
people with social phobia recognize that their fear of being
around people may be excessive or unreasonable, they are
unable to overcome it. They often worry for days or weeks in
advance of a dreaded situation.
Social phobia can be
limited to only one type of situation- such as a fear of
speaking in formal or informal situations, or eating,
drinking, or writing in front of others-or, in its most severe
form, may be so broad that a person experiences symptoms
almost anytime they are around other people. Social phobia can
be very debilitating-it may even keep people from going to
work or school on some days. Many people with this illness
have a hard time making and keeping friends.
Physical symptoms often
accompany the intense anxiety of social phobia and include
blushing, profuse sweating, trembling, nausea, and difficulty
talking. If you suffer from social phobia, you may be
painfully embarrassed by these symptoms and feel as though all
eyes are focused on you. You may be afraid of being with
people other than your family.
People with social phobia
are aware that their feelings are irrational. Even if they
manage to confront what they fear, they usually feel very
anxious beforehand and are intensely uncomfortable throughout.
Afterward, the unpleasant feelings may linger, as they worry
about how they may have been judged or what others may have
thought or observed about them.
Social phobia affects
about 5.3 million adult Americans.1
Women and men are equally likely to develop social phobia.10
The disorder usually begins in childhood or early adolescence,2
and there is some evidence that genetic factors are involved.11
Social phobia often co-occurs with other anxiety disorders or
depression.2,4 Substance abuse or
dependence may develop in individuals who attempt to
"self-medicate" their social phobia by drinking or
using drugs.4,5 Social phobia can
be treated successfully with carefully targeted psychotherapy
or medications.
Social phobia can
severely disrupt normal life, interfering with school, work,
or social relationships. The dread of a feared event can begin
weeks in advance and be quite debilitating.
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"I'm scared to
death of flying, and I never do it anymore. I used to start
dreading a plane trip a month before I was due to leave. It
was an awful feeling when that airplane door closed and I felt
trapped. My heart would pound and I would sweat bullets. When
the airplane would start to ascend, it just reinforced the
feeling that I couldn't get out. When I think about flying, I
picture myself losing control, freaking out, climbing the
walls, but of course I never did that. I'm not afraid of
crashing or hitting turbulence. It's just that feeling of
being trapped. Whenever I've thought about changing jobs, I've
had to think,'Would I be under pressure to fly?' These days I
only go places where I can drive or take a train. My friends
always point out that I couldn't get off a train traveling at
high speeds either, so why don't trains bother me? I just tell
them it isn't a rational fear."
A specific phobia is an
intense fear of something that poses little or no actual
danger. Some of the more common specific phobias are centered
around closed-in places, heights, escalators, tunnels, highway
driving, water, flying, dogs, and injuries involving blood.
Such phobias aren't just extreme fear; they are irrational
fear of a particular thing. You may be able to ski the world's
tallest mountains with ease but be unable to go above the 5th
floor of an office building. While adults with phobias realize
that these fears are irrational, they often find that facing,
or even thinking about facing, the feared object or situation
brings on a panic attack or severe anxiety.
Specific phobias affect
an estimated 6.3 million adult Americans1
and are twice as common in women as in men.10
The causes of specific phobias are not well understood, though
there is some evidence that these phobias may run in families.11
Specific phobias usually first appear during childhood or
adolescence and tend to persist into adulthood.12
If the object of the fear
is easy to avoid, people with specific phobias may not feel
the need to seek treatment. Sometimes, though, they may make
important career or personal decisions to avoid a phobic
situation, and if this avoidance is carried to extreme
lengths, it can be disabling. Specific phobias are highly
treatable with carefully targeted psychotherapy.
Phobias aren't just
extreme fears; they are irrational fears. You may be able to
ski the world's tallest mountainswith ease but feel panic
going above the 5th floor of an office building.
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"I always
thought I was just a worrier. I'd feel keyed up and unable to
relax. At times it would come and go, and at times it would be
constant. It could go on for days. I'd worry about what I was
going to fix for a dinner party, or what would be a great
present for somebody. I just couldn't let something go.
"I'd have
terrible sleeping problems. There were times I'd wake up wired
in the middle of the night. I had trouble concentrating, even
reading the newspaper or a novel. Sometimes I'd feel a little
lightheaded. My heart would race or pound. And that would make
me worry more. I was always imagining things were worse than
they really were: when I got a stomachache, I'd think it was
an ulcer.
"When my
problems were at their worst, I'd miss work and feel just
terrible about it. Then I worried that I'd lose my job. My
life was miserable until I got treatment."
Generalized anxiety
disorder (GAD) is much more than the normal anxiety people
experience day to day. It's chronic and fills one's day with
exaggerated worry and tension, even though there is little or
nothing to provoke it. Having this disorder means always
anticipating disaster, often worrying excessively about
health, money, family, or work. Sometimes, though, the source
of the worry is hard to pinpoint. Simply the thought of
getting through the day provokes anxiety.
People with GAD can't
seem to shake their concerns, even though they usually realize
that their anxiety is more intense than the situation
warrants. Their worries are accompanied by physical symptoms,
especially fatigue, headaches, muscle tension, muscle aches,
difficulty swallowing, trembling, twitching, irritability,
sweating, and hot flashes. People with GAD may feel
lightheaded or out of breath. They also may feel nauseated or
have to go to the bathroom frequently.
Individuals with GAD seem
unable to relax, and they may startle more easily than other
people. They tend to have difficulty concentrating, too.
Often, they have trouble falling or staying asleep.
Unlike people with
several other anxiety disorders, people with GAD don't
characteristically avoid certain situations as a result of
their disorder. When impairment associated with GAD is mild,
people with the disorder may be able to function in social
settings or on the job. If severe, however, GAD can be very
debilitating, making it difficult to carry out even the most
ordinary daily activities.
GAD affects about 4
million adult Americans1 and about
twice as many women as men.2 The
disorder comes on gradually and can begin across the life
cycle, though the risk is highest between childhood and middle
age.2 It is diagnosed when someone
spends at least 6 months worrying excessively about a number
of everyday problems. There is evidence that genes play a
modest role in GAD.13
GAD is commonly treated
with medications. GAD rarely occurs alone, however; it is
usually accompanied by another anxiety disorder, depression,
or substance abuse.2,4 These other
conditions must be treated along with GAD.
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NIMH supports research
into the causes, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of
anxiety disorders and other mental illnesses. Studies examine
the genetic and environmental risks for major anxiety
disorders, their course-both alone and when they occur along
with other diseases such as depression-and their treatment.
The ultimate goal is to be able to cure, and perhaps even to
prevent, anxiety disorders.
NIMH is harnessing the
most sophisticated scientific tools available to determine the
causes of anxiety disorders. Like heart disease and diabetes,
these brain disorders are complex and probably result from a
combination of genetic, behavioral, developmental, and other
factors.
Several parts of the
brain are key actors in a highly dynamic interplay that gives
rise to fear and anxiety.14 Using
brain imaging technologies and neurochemical techniques,
scientists are finding that a network of interacting
structures is responsible for these emotions. Much research
centers on the amygdala, an almond-shaped structure deep
within the brain. The amygdala is believed to serve as a
communications hub between the parts of the brain that process
incoming sensory signals and the parts that interpret them. It
can signal that a threat is present, and trigger a fear
response or anxiety. It appears that emotional memories stored
in the central part of the amygdala may play a role in
disorders involving very distinct fears, like phobias, while
different parts may be involved in other forms of anxiety.
Other research focuses on
the hippocampus, another brain structure that is responsible
for processing threatening or traumatic stimuli. The
hippocampus plays a key role in the brain by helping to encode
information into memories. Studies have shown that the
hippocampus appears to be smaller in people who have undergone
severe stress because of child abuse or military combat.15,16
This reduced size could help explain why individuals with PTSD
have flashbacks, deficits in explicit memory, and fragmented
memory for details of the traumatic event.
Also, research indicates
that other brain parts called the basal ganglia and striatum
are involved in obsessive-compulsive disorder.17
By learning more about
brain circuitry involved in fear and anxiety, scientists may
be able to devise new and more specific treatments for anxiety
disorders. For example, it someday may be possible to increase
the influence of the thinking parts of the brain on the
amygdala, thus placing the fear and anxiety response under
conscious control. In addition, with new findings about
neurogenesis (birth of new brain cells) throughout life,18
perhaps a method will be found to stimulate growth of new
neurons in the hippocampus in people with PTSD.
NIMH-supported studies of
twins and families suggest that genes play a role in the
origin of anxiety disorders. But heredity alone can't explain
what goes awry. Experience also plays a part. In PTSD, for
example, trauma triggers the anxiety disorder; but genetic
factors may explain why only certain individuals exposed to
similar traumatic events develop full-blown PTSD. Researchers
are attempting to learn how genetics and experience interact
in each of the anxiety disorders-information they hope will
yield clues to prevention and treatment.
Scientists supported by
NIMH are also conducting clinical trials to find the most
effective ways of treating anxiety disorders. For example, one
trial is examining how well medication and behavioral
therapies work together and separately in the treatment of OCD.
Another trial is assessing the safety and efficacy of
medication treatments for anxiety disorders in children and
adolescents with co-occurring attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD). For more information about these and other
clinical trials, visit the NIMH clinical trials web page, www.nimh.nih.gov/studies/index.cfm,
or the National Library of Medicine's clinical trials
database, www.clinicaltrials.gov.
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Effective treatments for
each of the anxiety disorders have been developed through
research.19 In general, two types
of treatment are available for an anxiety disorder-medication
and specific types of psychotherapy (sometimes called
"talk therapy"). Both approaches can be effective
for most disorders. The choice of one or the other, or both,
depends on the patient's and the doctor's preference, and also
on the particular anxiety disorder. For example, only
psychotherapy has been found effective for specific phobias.
When choosing a therapist, you should find out whether
medications will be available if needed.
Before treatment can
begin, the doctor must conduct a careful diagnostic evaluation
to determine whether your symptoms are due to an anxiety
disorder, which anxiety disorder(s) you may have, and what
coexisting conditions may be present. Anxiety disorders are
not all treated the same, and it is important to determine the
specific problem before embarking on a course of treatment.
Sometimes alcoholism or some other coexisting condition will
have such an impact that it is necessary to treat it at the
same time or before treating the anxiety disorder.
If you have been treated
previously for an anxiety disorder, be prepared to tell the
doctor what treatment you tried. If it was a medication, what
was the dosage, was it gradually increased, and how long did
you take it? If you had psychotherapy, what kind was it, and
how often did you attend sessions? It often happens that
people believe they have "failed" at treatment, or
that the treatment has failed them, when in fact it was never
given an adequate trial.
When you undergo
treatment for an anxiety disorder, you and your doctor or
therapist will be working together as a team. Together, you
will attempt to find the approach that is best for you. If one
treatment doesn't work, the odds are good that another one
will. And new treatments are continually being developed
through research. So don't give up hope.
Medications
Psychiatrists or other
physicians can prescribe medications for anxiety disorders.
These doctors often work closely with psychologists, social
workers, or counselors who provide psychotherapy. Although
medications won't cure an anxiety disorder, they can keep the
symptoms under control and enable you to lead a normal,
fulfilling life.
The major classes of
medications used for various anxiety disorders are described
below.
Antidepressants
A number of medications that were originally approved for
treatment of depression have been found to be effective for
anxiety disorders. If your doctor prescribes an
antidepressant, you will need to take it for several weeks
before symptoms start to fade. So it is important not to get
discouraged and stop taking these medications before they've
had a chance to work.
Some of the newest
antidepressants are called selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors, or SSRIs. These medications act in the
brain on a chemical messenger called serotonin. SSRIs tend to
have fewer side effects than older antidepressants. People do
sometimes report feeling slightly nauseated or jittery when
they first start taking SSRIs, but that usually disappears
with time. Some people also experience sexual dysfunction when
taking some of these medications. An adjustment in dosage or a
switch to another SSRI will usually correct bothersome
problems. It is important to discuss side effects with your
doctor so that he or she will know when there is a need for a
change in medication.
Fluoxetine, sertraline,
fluvoxamine, paroxetine, and citalopram are among the SSRIs
commonly prescribed for panic disorder, OCD, PTSD, and social
phobia. SSRIs are often used to treat people who have panic
disorder in combination with OCD, social phobia, or
depression. Venlafaxine, a drug closely related to the SSRIs,
is useful for treating GAD. Other newer antidepressants are
under study in anxiety disorders, although one, bupropion,
does not appear effective for these conditions. These
medications are started at a low dose and gradually increased
until they reach a therapeutic level.
Similarly, antidepressant
medications called tricyclics are started at low doses
and gradually increased. Tricyclics have been around longer
than SSRIs and have been more widely studied for treating
anxiety disorders. For anxiety disorders other than OCD, they
are as effective as the SSRIs, but many physicians and
patients prefer the newer drugs because the tricyclics
sometimes cause dizziness, drowsiness, dry mouth, and weight
gain. When these problems persist or are bothersome, a change
in dosage or a switch in medications may be needed.
Tricyclics are useful in
treating people with co-occurring anxiety disorders and
depression. Clomipramine, the only antidepressant in its class
prescribed for OCD, and imipramine, prescribed for panic
disorder and GAD, are examples of tricyclics.
Monoamine oxidase
inhibitors, or MAOIs, are the oldest class of
antidepressant medications. The most commonly prescribed MAOI
is phenelzine, which is helpful for people with panic disorder
and social phobia. Tranylcypromine and isoprocarboxazid are
also used to treat anxiety disorders. People who take MAOIs
are put on a restrictive diet because these medications can
interact with some foods and beverages, including cheese and
red wine, which contain a chemical called tyramine. MAOIs also
interact with some other medications, including SSRIs.
Interactions between MAOIs and other substances can cause
dangerous elevations in blood pressure or other potentially
life-threatening reactions.
Anti-Anxiety
Medications
High-potency benzodiazepines relieve symptoms quickly
and have few side effects, although drowsiness can be a
problem. Because people can develop a tolerance to them-and
would have to continue increasing the dosage to get the same
effect-benzodiazepines are generally prescribed for short
periods of time. One exception is panic disorder, for which
they may be used for 6 months to a year. People who have had
problems with drug or alcohol abuse are not usually good
candidates for these medications because they may become
dependent on them.
Some people experience
withdrawal symptoms when they stop taking benzodiazepines,
although reducing the dosage gradu-ally can diminish those
symptoms. In certain instances, the symptoms of anxiety can
rebound after these medications are stopped. Potential
problems with benzodiazepines have led some physicians to shy
away from using them, or to use them in inadequate doses, even
when they are of potential benefit to the patient.
Benzodiazepines include clonazepam, which is used for social
phobia and GAD; alprazolam, which is helpful for panic
disorder and GAD; and lorazepam, which is also useful for
panic disorder.
Buspirone, a member of a
class of drugs called azipirones, is a newer anti-anxiety
medication that is used to treat GAD. Possible side effects
include dizziness, headaches, and nausea. Unlike the
benzodiazepines, buspirone must be taken consistently for at
least two weeks to achieve an anti-anxiety effect.
Other Medications
Beta-blockers, such as propanolol, are often used to treat
heart conditions but have also been found to be helpful in
certain anxiety disorders, particularly in social phobia. When
a feared situation, such as giving an oral presentation, can
be predicted in advance, your doctor may prescribe a
beta-blocker that can be taken to keep your heart from
pounding, your hands from shaking, and other physical symptoms
from developing.
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Taking Medications
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Before taking medication for an anxiety
disorder:
- Ask your doctor to tell you about the
effects and side effects of the drug he or she is prescribing.
- Tell your doctor about any alternative
therapies or over-the-counter medications you are using.
- Ask your doctor when and how the medication
will be stopped. Some drugs can't safely be stopped abruptly; they
have to be tapered slowly under a physician's supervision.
- Be aware that some medications are
effective in anxiety disorders only as long as they are taken
regularly, and symptoms may occur again when the medications are
discontinued.
- Work together with your doctor to determine
the right dosage of the right medication to treat your anxiety
disorder.
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Psychotherapy
Psychotherapy involves
talking with a trained mental health professional, such as a
psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker, or counselor to
learn how to deal with problems like anxiety disorders.
Cognitive-Behavioral
and Behavioral Therapy
Research has shown that a form of psychotherapy that is
effective for several anxiety disorders, particularly panic
disorder and social phobia, is cognitive-behavioral therapy
(CBT). It has two components. The cognitive
component helps people change thinking patterns that keep them
from overcoming their fears. For example, a person with panic
disorder might be helped to see that his or her panic attacks
are not really heart attacks as previously feared; the
tendency to put the worst possible interpretation on physical
symptoms can be overcome. Similarly, a person with social
phobia might be helped to overcome the belief that others are
continually watching and harshly judging him or her.
The behavioral
component of CBT seeks to change people's reactions to
anxiety-provoking situations. A key element of this component
is exposure, in which people confront the things they
fear. An example would be a treatment approach called exposure
and response prevention for people with OCD. If the person
has a fear of dirt and germs, the therapist may encourage them
to dirty their hands, then go a certain period of time without
washing. The therapist helps the patient to cope with the
resultant anxiety. Eventually, after this exercise has been
repeated a number of times, anxiety will diminish. In another
sort of exposure exercise, a person with social phobia may be
encouraged to spend time in feared social situations without
giving in to the temptation to flee. In some cases the
individual with social phobia will be asked to deliberately
make what appear to be slight social blunders and observe
other people's reactions; if they are not as harsh as
expected, the person's social anxiety may begin to fade. For a
person with PTSD, exposure might consist of recalling the
traumatic event in detail, as if in slow motion, and in effect
re-experiencing it in a safe situation. If this is done
carefully, with support from the therapist, it may be possible
to defuse the anxiety associated with the memories. Another
behavioral technique is to teach the patient deep breathing as
an aid to relaxation and anxiety management.
Behavioral therapy alone,
without a strong cognitive compo-nent, has long been used
effectively to treat specific phobias. Here also, therapy
involves exposure. The person is gradually exposed to the
object or situation that is feared. At first, the exposure may
be only through pictures or audiotapes. Later, if possible,
the person actually confronts the feared object or situation.
Often the therapist will accompany him or her to provide
support and guidance.
If you undergo CBT or
behavioral therapy, exposure will be carried out only when you
are ready; it will be done gradually and only with your
permission. You will work with the therapist to determine how
much you can handle and at what pace you can proceed.
A major aim of CBT and
behavioral therapy is to reduce anxiety by eliminating beliefs
or behaviors that help to maintain the anxiety disorder. For
example, avoidance of a feared object or situation prevents a
person from learning that it is harmless. Similarly,
performance of compulsive rituals in OCD gives some relief
from anxiety and prevents the person from testing rational
thoughts about danger, contamination, etc.
To be effective, CBT or
behavioral therapy must be directed at the person's specific
anxieties. An approach that is effective for a person with a
specific phobia about dogs is not going to help a person with
OCD who has intrusive thoughts of harming loved ones. Even for
a single disorder, such as OCD, it is necessary to tailor the
therapy to the person's particular concerns. CBT and
behavioral therapy have no adverse side effects other than the
temporary discomfort of increased anxiety, but the therapist
must be well trained in the techniques of the treatment in
order for it to work as desired. During treatment, the
therapist probably will assign "homework" --
specific problems that the patient will need to work on
between sessions.
CBT or behavioral therapy
generally lasts about 12 weeks. It may be conducted in a
group, provided the people in the group have sufficiently
similar problems. Group therapy is particularly effective for
people with social phobia. There is some evidence that, after
treatment is terminated, the beneficial effects of CBT last
longer than those of medications for people with panic
disorder; the same may be true for OCD, PTSD, and social
phobia.
Medication may be
combined with psychotherapy, and for many people this is the
best approach to treatment. As stated earlier, it is important
to give any treatment a fair trial. And if one approach
doesn't work, the odds are that another one will, so don't
give up.
If you have recovered
from an anxiety disorder, and at a later date it recurs, don't
consider yourself a "treatment failure." Recurrences
can be treated effectively, just like an initial episode. In
fact, the skills you learned in dealing with the initial
episode can be helpful in coping with a setback.
Coexisting Conditions
It is common for an
anxiety disorder to be accompanied by another anxiety
disorder or another illness. 4,5,6
Often people who have panic disorder or social phobia, for
example, also experience the intense sadness and
hopelessness associated with depression. Other conditions
that a person can have along with an anxiety disorder
include an eating disorder or alcohol or drug abuse. Any of
these problems will need to be treated as well, ideally at
the same time as the anxiety disorder.
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If you, or someone you
know, has symptoms of anxiety, a visit to the family physician
is usually the best place to start. A physician can help
determine whether the symptoms are due to an anxiety disorder,
some other medical condition, or both. Frequently, the next
step in getting treatment for an anxiety disorder is referral
to a mental health professional.
Among the professionals
who can help are psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers,
and counselors. However, it's best to look for a professional
who has specialized training in cognitive-behavioral
therapy and/or behavioral therapy, as appropriate, and who is
open to the use of medications, should they be needed.
As stated earlier,
psychologists, social workers, and counselors sometimes work
closely with a psychiatrist or other physician, who will
prescribe medications when they are required. For some people,
group therapy is a helpful part of treatment.
It's important that you
feel comfortable with the therapy that the mental health
professional suggests. If this is not the case, seek help
elsewhere. However, if you've been taking medication, it's
important not to discontinue it abruptly, as stated before.
Certain drugs have to be tapered off under the supervision of
your physician.
Remember, though, that
when you find a health care professional that you're satisfied
with, the two of you are working together as a team. Together
you will be able to develop a plan to treat your anxiety
disorder that may involve medications, cognitive-behavioral or
other talk therapy, or both, as appropriate.
You may be concerned
about paying for treatment for an anxiety disorder. If you
belong to a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) or have some
other kind of health insurance, the costs of your treatment
may be fully or partially covered. There are also public
mental health centers that charge people according to how much
they are able to pay. If you are on public assistance, you may
be able to get care through your state Medicaid plan.
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Many people with anxiety
disorders benefit from joining a self-help group and sharing
their problems and achievements with others. Talking with
trusted friends or a trusted member of the clergy can also be
very helpful, although not a substitute for mental health
care. Participating in an Internet chat room may also be of
value in sharing concerns and decreasing a sense of isolation,
but any advice received should be viewed with caution.
The family is of great
importance in the recovery of a person with an anxiety
disorder. Ideally, the family should be supportive without
helping to perpetuate the person's symptoms. If the family
tends to trivialize the disorder or demand improvement without
treatment, the affected person will suffer. You may wish to
show this booklet to your family and enlist their help as
educated allies in your fight against your anxiety disorder.
Stress management
techniques and meditation may help you to calm yourself and
enhance the effects of therapy, although there is as yet no
scientific evidence to support the value of these
"wellness" approaches to recovery from anxiety
disorders. There is preliminary evidence that aerobic exercise
may be of value, and it is known that caffeine, illicit drugs,
and even some over-the-counter cold medications can aggravate
the symptoms of an anxiety disorder. Check with your physician
or pharmacist before taking any additional medicines.
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For
More Information
National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Office of Communications and Public Liaison
6001 Executive Blvd., Room 8184, MSC 9663
Bethesda, MD 20892-9663
Toll-free information services:
Anxiety Disorders: 1-88-88-ANXIETY
Depression: 1-800-421-4211
General inquiries: (301) 443-4513
TTY: (301) 443-8431
E-mail: nimhinfo@nih.gov
Web site: www.nimh.nih.gov
Anxiety
Disorders Association of America
11900 Parklawn Drive, Suite 100
Rockville, MD 20852-2624
(301) 231-9350
www.adaa.org
Freedom from
Fear
308 Seaview Avenue
Staten Island, NY 10305
(718) 351-1717
www.freedomfromfear.com
Obsessive
Compulsive (OC) Foundation
337 Notch Hill Road
North Branford, CT 06471
(203) 315-2190
www.ocfoundation.org
American
Psychiatric Association
1400 K Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 682-6220
www.psych.org
American
Psychological Association
750 1st Street, NE
Washington, DC 20002-4242
(202) 336-5500
www.apa.org
Association for
Advancement of Behavior Therapy
305 7th Avenue
New York, NY 10001
(212) 647-1890
www.aabt.org
National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI)
Colonial Place Three
2107 Wilson Blvd., Suite 300
Arlington, VA 22201
Phone: 1-800-950-NAMI (6264) or (703) 524-7600
Internet: http://www.nami.org
National Mental
Health Association (NMHA)
2001 N. Beauregard Street, 12th Floor
Alexandria, VA 22311
Phone: 1-800-969-6942 or (703) 684-7722
TTY-800-443-5959
Internet: http://www.nmha.org
National Center
for PTSD
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
116D VA Medical and Regional Office Center
215 N. Main St.
White River Junction, VT 05009
(802) 296-5132
E-mail: ptsd@dartmouth.edu
Web site: www.ncptsd.org
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NIMH Clinical
Trials Web Page
www.nimh.nih.gov/studies/index.cfm
National Library
of Medicine
Clinical Trials Database
www.clinicaltrials.gov
[home]
| Top of Pub |
1Narrow
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on U.S. Census estimated residential population age 18 to 54
on July 1, 1998. Unpublished.
2Robins
LN, Regier DA, eds. Psychiatric disorders in America: the
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VIII.
This brochure is a revision by
Mary Lynn Hendrix of an earlier version written by Marilyn Dickey.
Scientific information and/or
review for this revision were provided by Steven E. Hyman, M.D., Richard
Nakamura, Ph.D., Matthew Rudorfer, M.D., Linda Street, Ph.D., and Elaine
Baldwin, all of NIMH, and Una McCann, M.D., now of The Johns Hopkins University.
Editorial assistance was provided by Clarissa Wittenberg, Margaret Strock, and
Melissa Spearing of NIMH.
All material in this publication
is in the public domain and may be copied or reproduced without permission of
the Institute. Citation of the source is appreciated.
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