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Panic Attacks Symptoms – What Really Happens During An Attack
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Make sure you do not have mitral valve prolapse which is associated with panic attacks.. This can be helped by a cardiologist..
They will get better with the right help. Go to the doc, get the heart syndrome ruled out, then get a referral for a psych doc if needed.
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Physiological
Panic attacks may be related to hyperventilation (shallow chest breathing which leads to imbalance of oxygen and carbon dioxide).
The brain's mechanism for warning of a lack of oxygen may be triggered in error, leading the body to respond as if it is in fact suffocating.
There may be a genetic disposition or other hereditary basis for panic disorder.
Hormonal imbalances, certain illnesses, and substances—such as caffeine, prescription or over-the-counter medications, and illegal drugs—can trigger panic attacks.
Psychological
Major life transitions such as graduation, marriage, or birth of a child may precede a panic attack, particularly the first one.
Severe stress, caused by the death of a loved one, divorce, or job loss for example, can elicit a panic attack. For more information and coping tips, see Helpguide’s Coping with Stress: Management and Reduction Techniques and Coping with Loss: Guide to Grieving and Bereavement.
Generalized anxiety or severe separation anxiety can develop into panic disorder or phobias, most often agoraphobia.
A history of emotional trauma, even if not recalled, may be behind some panic attacks. Overwhelming stress in your current situation may trigger a response based on an emotional trauma that occurred earlier in your life.
Panic attacks fall into three different causal patterns:
Unexpected: panic attacks occur "out of the blue," without warning, and with no clear reason, sometimes even when asleep.
Situational: panic attacks occur in specific, repetitive situations in which a person always has an attack (such as when crossing a bridge, or when entering a crowded place).
Situationally predisposed: panic attacks occur under circumstances in which the person is likely to have an attack, but does not always (such as driving on the freeway).
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people can get over panic attacks by visiting a doctor and getting medications such as xanax or ativan that can help to calm you down during an attack. also, by learning things such as deep breathing, meditation, and relaxation techniques, you can also cut down on panic attacks by RECOGNIZING when you are getting stressed or overwhelmed and relaxing yourself before getting into full blown panic.
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RN
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To overcome such attacks you'll need to re-learn how you react to things. Develop a higher degree of self control.
It's work, but, you can learn to shunt such attacks away.
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According to one theory of panic disorder, the body's normal "alarm system," the set of mental and physical mechanisms that allows a person to respond to a threat, tends to be triggered unnecessarily, when there is no danger. Scientists don't know exactly why this happens, or why some people are more susceptible to the problem than others. Panic disorder has been found to run in families, and this may mean that inheritance (genes) plays a strong role in determining who will get it. However, many people who have no family history of the disorder develop it. Often, the first attacks are triggered by physical illnesses, a major life stress, or perhaps medications that increase activity in the part of the brain involved in fear reactions.
Do they ever get better?
Panic attacks tends to continue for months or years. However, thanks to research, there are a variety of treatments available, including several effective medications.
If left untreated, it may worsen to the point where the person's life is seriously affected.
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http://phifoundation.org/heal.html
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