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What is An
Anxiety Disorder Panic Attack?
An anxiety
disorder panic attack can change your life and the way you live
it forever because of the way panic and anxiety simply “take
over” the body. This brief article will take a closer look at
the anxiety disorder panic attack and what effect it has on our
lives, how we can handle it, and what it means in the long
term.
The Basics
of An Anxiety Disorder Panic Attack
Anxiety
disorder affects about 13% of the world’s population, according
to most objective world health sources. Anxiety disorders
include panic attacks, fear disorders, and sleep disorders.
Stress disorders affect more women than men by a difference of
about 2 or 3 percent. Anxiety attacks appear for a reason,
generally that the handling of life’s stressful situations is
not adequate to help the body adjust. They appear to be random
but normally are not. They appear to be without cause but
normally have a very clear cause: stress.
An anxiety
disorder panic attack will continue to occur only because the
sufferer has not done enough to prevent it by not handling the
stress properly and allowing other factors to interfere with
normal stress management. Factors like a poor diet, little to
no exercise, and insufficient stress relief can all add up to
bigger problems. In a general sense, anxiety attacks can be
treated only through treating the individual symptoms. The
essence of a stress-related attack is deeper than the symptoms,
however.
Cures
There are many
ways to cure the panic attacks in your life and all of them are
related to eliminating or handling the stress that you have.
First, getting a proper sleep on a regular basis is a key
component to resting the body and helping it recover from the
day’s events. Second, a proper diet gives the body the
nourishment it needs to continue through the day and repair the
cells, organisms and tissues that need to be repaired. Third,
taking private time to yourself helps rejuvenate your spirit
and quiet your heart. This is generally a philosophical point
of view but it is known to help several people with their
anxiety disorder panic attack and its
symptoms.
Long-term
The long term
stress related problems that a panic attack can generate can be
quite severe. If an anxiety attack is not handled properly, the
heart takes punishment first and other bodily organs follow.
The brain dedicates its energy elsewhere, the lungs work
harder, the heart pumps faster, and the blood thins due to lack
of cellular support. Effectively a panic attack is a
multi-system attacker as oppose to being just about one organ
or bodily system. With such broad symptoms, the body definitely
takes a lot of punishment from a panic attack. Take care to
live a low stress, healthy, balanced life and panic attacks
will be a thing of the past for you and your
family.
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