Anxiety
Anxiety
Anxiety
Galina Gerasimova
Raeanne Perri
Marisa Sevilla
Joe Shen
Grace Velasquez
Overview
• What is Anxiety?
• What are the different types of anxiety
disorders?
• What are the causes?
• What are the symptoms?
• What are the treatments?
• Professional Resources available.
Definition of Anxiety
• Anxiety is a feeling of apprehension or fear. The
source of this uneasiness is not always known or
recognized, which can add to the distress you
feel.
• Anxiety disorders are a group of psychiatric
conditions that involve excessive anxiety.
Anxiety Facts
• Most common mental illness in the U.S. with 19 million of the adult
(ages 18-54) U.S. population affected.
• Panic Disorder
– Women are twice as likely to be afflicted than men.
– Occurs with major depression in very high rates.
• Twitching or trembling
• Muscle tension
• Headaches
• Sweating
• Dry mouth
• Difficulty swallowing
• Abdominal pain (may be the only symptom of stress
especially in a child)
Additional Symptoms of Anxiety
Sometimes other symptoms accompany
anxiety:
• Dizziness
• Rapid or irregular heart rate
• Rapid breathing
• Diarrhea or frequent need to urinate
• Fatigue
• Irritability, including loss of your temper
• Sleeping difficulties and nightmares
• Decreased concentration
• Sexual problems
Physical Reaction to Anxiety
Auditory and Visual Stimuli:
sights and sounds are processed
first by the thalamus, which filters
the incoming cues and shunts
them either directly to the
amygdala or to the other parts of
the cortex.
Cortex:
It gives raw sights and sounds
meanings, enabling the brain
to become conscious of what it
Is seeing or hearing. One
region, the prefrontal cortex,
may be vital to turning off the
anxiety response once a threat
has passed.
Physical Reaction to Anxiety
Amygdala:
emotional core of the brain, the
amygdala has the primary role
of triggering the fear response.
information that passes through
the amygdala is tagged with
emotional significance.
Hippocampus:
This is the memory center,
vital to storing the raw
information coming in from
the senses along with the
emotional baggage attached
to the data during their trip
through the amygdala.
Social Effects of Anxiety
• Depression
– Not as involved with family and friends the way you
used to be
– Lowered quality of relationships
– Low energy
– Lack of motivation to do the things you once looked
forward to doing
• Unable to convey the person that you are
• Fear and avoidance of situations where previous
attacks occurred
Allopathic Treatments
• Medications (Drug Therapy):
• Behavioral Therapy
• Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
• Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
Alternative Treatments
• Acupuncture
• Aromatherapy
• Breathing Exercises
• Exercise
• Meditation
• Nutrition and Diet Therapy
• Vitamins
• Self Love
Medications
• Buspirone: shown to be effective but usually
takes 3-4 weeks, particularly useful in elderly
patients
• Benzodiazepines: include Xanax and Valium, act
rapidly and successfully but can be addictive and
loses effectiveness over time
• Side Effects: dizziness, headaches, nausea,
impaired memory
Behavioral and Cognitive
Therapy
• Teaches patient to react differently to situations and bodily
sensations that trigger anxiety
• Teaches patient to understand how thinking patterns that
contribute to symptoms
• Patients learn that by changing how they perceive
feelings of anxiety, the less likely they are to have them
• Examples: Hyperventilating, writing down list of top fears
and doing one of them once a week, spinning in a chair
until dizzy; after awhile patients learned to cope with the
negative feelings associated with them and replace them
with positive ones
Psychodynamic
Psychotherapy
• Psychodynamic therapy is a general name for therapeutic
approaches which try to get the patient to bring to the surface
their true feelings, so that they can experience them and
understand them. Psychodynamic Psychotherapy uses the
basic assumption that everyone has feelings held in the
subconscious which are too painful to be faced. We then come
up with defenses (such as denial) to protect us knowing about
these painful feelings.
• Psychodynamic psychotherapy assumes that these defenses
have gone wrong and are causing more harm than good,
making you seek help. It tries to subdue them, with the
intention that once you are aware of what is really going on in
your mind the feelings will not be as painful.
• Takes an extremely long time and is labor intensive
Acupuncture
• Caused by the imbalance of chi coming about by
keeping emotions in for too long
• Emotion effects the chi to move in an abnormal
way: when fearful it goes to the floor, when angry
the neck and shoulders tighten
• Redirects the chi into a balanced flow, releases
tension in the muscles, increases flow of blood,
lymph, and nerve impulses to affected areas
• Takes 10-12 weekly sessions
Aromatherapy
• Calming Effect: vanilla, orange blossom, rose,
chamomile, and lavender
• Reducing Stress: Lavender, sandalwood, and
nutmeg
• Uplifting Oils: Bergamot, geranium, juniper, and
lavender
• Essential Oil Combination: 3 parts lavender, 2
parts bergamot, and 1 part sandalwood
Exercise
• Benefits: symbolic meaning of the activity, the
distraction from worries, mastery of a sport,
effects on self image, biochemical and
physiological changes associated with exercise,
symbolic meaning of the sport
• Helps by expelling negative emotions and
adrenaline out of your body in order to enter a
more relaxed, calm state to deal with issues
and conflicts
Meditation
• Cultivates calmness to create a sense of control
over life
• Practice: Sit quietly in a position comfortable to
you and take a few deep breaths to relax your
muscles, next choose a calming phrase (such as
“om” or that with great significance to you),
silently repeat the word or phrase for 20 minutes
Nutrition and Diet Therapy
• Foods to Eat: whole grains, bananas, asparagus,
garlic, brown rice, green and leafy veggies, soy
products, yogurt
• Foods to Avoid: coffee, alcohol, sugar, strong
spices, highly acidic foods, foods with white flour
• Keep a diary of the foods you eat and your
anxiety attacks; after awhile you may be able to
see a correlation
• East small, frequent meals
Vitamins
• B-Vitamins stabilize the body’s lactate levels
which cause anxiety attacks (B-6, B-1, B-3)
• Calcium (a natural tranquilizer) and magnesium
relax the nervous system; taken in combination
before bed improves sleep
• Vitamin C taken in large doses also has a
tranquilizing effect
• Potassium helps with proper functioning of
adrenal glands
• Zinc has a calming effect on the nervous system
Self Love
• The most important holistic treatment of all
• Laugh: be able to laugh at yourself and with
others; increases endorphin levels and decreases
stress hormones
• Let go of frustrations
• Do not judge self harshly: don’t expect more from
yourself than you do others
• Accept your faults
Where to Get Help
• SFSU Health Center - The services of the Center are open to
regularly enrolled (matriculated) undergraduate and graduate
students.
Office hours are 8AM to Noon and 1PM to 7PM Monday through
Thursday and until 5PM on Friday. Appointments may be made by
phone (415) 338-2208 or in person at Student Services Building
Room 208.
• Any licensed psychologist or psychiatrist
• U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services – Substance Abuse &
Mental Health Services Administration – find resources in your area
http://www.mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/databases
Additional Links
• Anxiety Screening Tools
• Anxiety Disorders Association of America (ADAA)
• Freedom From Fear (www.freedomfromfear.org)
• National Institute of Mental Health
(www.nimh.nih.gov)
• U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services
(http://www.mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/topics/expl
ore/stress/)
The End