The popular description of Anxiety or someone displaying panic symptoms is that it describes an individual who regularly have sensations of intense, irrational fear and a looming sense of disaster or dread. Someone who suffers from Anxiety therefore will be confronted with paralyzing fear for no apparent reason. An attack of this type can happen at any time of the day with no warning.
There are also other disorders that seem to go with hand-in-hand with Anxiety such as fear of public places (agoraphobia), obsessive-compulsive disorders, depression and other phobias. Sometimes these phobias arise out of the fact that they suffer from Anxiety and panic attacks in the first place. Countless people who suffer from anxiety start to suffer from the apprehension of having an anxiety attack in public, therefore fear of public places.
Different types of anxiety disorders are:
Anxiety/Panic Disorder
This is the form of the disorder that causes sudden attacks that paralyze you with fear for no apparent reason. There are primary reasons for these attacks, although the sufferer rarely knows what they are. Panic attack treatment normally revolves around identifying what these underlying causes are.
Social Anxiety Disorder
The popular account for Anxiety is that it describes an individual who regularly have feelings of intense, irrational fear and an looming sense of disaster or dread. Someone who experiences Anxiety therefore will be confronted with debilitating fear for no apparent reason. An attack of this type can happen at any time of the day with no warning.
General Anxiety Disorder
This disorder is a sharpened sense of anxiety or worry experienced on a daily basis. It is a chronic disorder that is continuous throughout the sufferer’s day. They experience difficulty concentrating or constant, excessive worry about every day concerns with an incapability to manage those overwhelming feelings of worry.
Anxiety treatment is geared towards helping with all of these different types of anxiety disorders.
*Disclaimer: This posting is based on information freely available in the popular press and medical journals that deal with anxiety. Nothing herein is intended to be or should be construed to be any sort of medical advice. For medical advice the reader should consult with his or her physician or other medical specialist.