news bulletin  
     
   
     
 

Two Sides Of The Same Coin: Speech And Gesture Mutually Interact To Enhance Comprehension
January 7, 2010, Medical News TODAY

 
 

 

 
 

New Brain Scan IDs Early Alzheimer’s
January 7, 2010, Psych Central

 
     
 

Serious Emotional Disturbances Found Among Children After Katrina
January 6, 2010, Science Daily

 
     
 

Abuse in Childhood Linked to Migraine and Other Pain Disorders
January 6, 2010, Science Daily

 
     
 

How Childhood Trauma Can Cause Adult Obesity
January 5, 2010, TIME Magazine

 
     
   
     
   
     
   
     
   
     
   

 

     
     
     
anxiety disorders
 
 

Normally, anxiety is a healthy response to stress. Anxiety can help you overcome pressures at work, study hard for a test, focus on schoolwork, increase concentration and motivation, and help you triumph over difficult tasks. Anxiety can be a great coping mechanism; however, it can also be an immobilizing disorder. Therapies and treatments are effective and available now more than ever, and can help you live a dynamic, rewarding life.

Anxiety disorders vary from mild feelings of fear and apprehension to extreme and debilitating feelings of panic and dread. Often, these severe feelings of terror are irrational and groundless and can disrupt your daily responsibilities and diminish your quality of life. In America more than 40 million people are affected by anxiety disorders each year.

Types of anxiety disorders include:

  • Generalized Anxiety Disorder – chronic, unwarranted, and inflated worry accompanied by symptoms of muscle tension, sweating, trembling, sleeplessness, fatigue, headaches, and irritability.
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) – uncontrollable, unwelcome, repetitive, and interfering thoughts and rituals that consume daily life.
  • Panic Disorder – acute, rigorous, and unbearable assaults of terror that strike unexpectedly and swiftly, accompanied by symptoms of dizziness, chest pain, shortness of breath, pounding heart, nausea, shivering, numbness, chills, hot flashes, peculiar feelings of unreality, and a fear of dying.
  • Phobias – (e.g. agoraphobia and social phobia) illogical fears of certain things or situations that can put unreasonable limits on life and set off feelings of extreme anxiety accompanied by symptoms of trembling, sweating, and pounding heart, as well as, panic attacks.
  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) – feelings of intense anxiety that stem from living through a traumatic event such as rape, war, abuse, natural disasters, kidnappings, hostage situations, car accidents, and plane crashes. Symptoms include: flashbacks, emotional deadness, nightmares, depression, insomnia, exhaustion, inability to concentrate, panic attacks, and being easily distracted, startled, and angered. Often, people suffering from PTSD have trouble holding a job, keeping relationships, and carrying out daily responsibilities.

helpful links

generalized anxiety disorder (gad)
 

obsessive-compulsive disorder (ocd)
 

Helping a Child with OCD
Anxiety Disorders Association of America

National Institute of Mental Health


panic disorder/phobias

Social Phobia
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

Mental Health America
Phobia

Mental Health America
Social Phobias

Phobias and Fear Factors
MSN Health and Fitness

 

National Institute of Mental Health
Social Anxiety Disorder

National Institute of Mental Health
Panic Disorder

Mental Health America
Factsheet: Panic Disorder

 


post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd)
 
 
The National Register is not responsible for the content or maintenance of these websites.

psychology topics
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Updated: January 8, 2010
 


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