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Anxiety
Attack Heart Problems
Anxiety attack
heart problems are any problems related to the cardiovascular
system of your body that are caused by anxiety or panic
attacks. Due to the very nature of a panic attack, it is not
surprising that anxiety attack heart problems are among the
leading causes of heart attacks or other cardiovascular issues
among North Americans today. This is not to say that an anxiety
or panic attack does not have a heavy effect on other systems
of the body as well, but it’s effect on the heart and blood
flow is easily measured and quite noticeably
dangerous.
A panic attack
is a sudden onset of fear or other terror that causes
frightening symptoms that can paralyze a person in the mood of
the moment. Many people report the notion of being “frozen by
fear” and an anxiety attack definitely resembles that to a
large degree. Patients discuss shaking, trembling, chills,
numbness in extremities, heart palpitations, and trouble
breathing among other things that are caused by the great
difficulty of a panic attack.
Anxiety attack
heart problems are common because of the close association
stress has with other heart problems. Anxiety can accompany any
heart disease or cardiac condition that causes a drop in blood
pressure because of this close relationship in systems and
bodily functions. This, in fact, causes a sudden decrease in
cardiac output, which is the amount of blood being pumped by
the heart. Anxiety is also closely related to (but not the
cause of) a condition called mitral valve prolapse or
MVP.
Panic attacks
generate a common human response to danger: the “fight or
flight” response. This was said to evolve from early human
types that either fled danger or took it on if they could.
Fight or flight generates a lot of biological processes because
of the energy the body needs to perform either task. The heart
races, the blood quickens, the eyes function differently,
senses are heightened, and other parts of the body begin to
react in other ways such as muscles tightening,
etc.
Anxiety attack
heart difficulties can arise from the heart being told to work
too fast by the brain, which is in charge of the “fight or
flight” mechanism. At this point, the body often decides to
simply shut down because it’s easier on the systems involved.
For this reason, the heart once again runs the virtual gamut of
both beating faster and beating slower; calming the body down
and slowing blood flow one moment and then speeding the body up
and creating more blood flow the next minute.
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