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The Self Help Method:
Panic Experts

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Anxiety Attack vs Panic Attack
Tips to Deal with Anxiety and Panic Attacks
Panic
What is a Panic Attack?
What is a Panic Disorder?
Reality of Panic Disorder.
Agoraphobia and Panic Attacks
Agoraphobia
Panic Disorder In Children and Adolescents
Causes of Panic Attacks
Panic Attack Treatments
-Panic Attack Cures
Elinminate Anxiety and Panic Attacks For Good
Public Speaking and Panic Attacks
Panic Attacks and Heart Rhythm
Cure For Panic Attacks by Finding the Root Cause.
Four Ways to Get Rid of a Panic Attack
Panic Attack Medications and Drugs
Limited Symptom Attack
Natural Panic Attack Treatment
More Natural Panic Attacks Treatmen
Night-Time Panic Attacks
Overcoming Nocturnal Panic Attacks
Panic Attack-How Would I Know?
Panic Patterns During Sleep
The Triggers of Morning Panic Attacks
Anxiety
What is Anxiety?
What is Anxiety Disorder?
Coping with Anxiety Disorder
Statistics and Facts About Anxiety Disorders
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Anxiety Disorders in Children and Teens
A Look at Social Anxiety Disorder.
What to do When You Think You Have an Anxiety Disorder.
Getting Rid of Intrusive Thoughts
The Impact of General Anxiety Disorder
Understanding the Symptoms of Anxiety Attacks
Fear of Heights
Fear of Heights-Acrophobia
Stress
What is Stress?
Stress and Panic Attacks
Ways to Eliminate Stress
What Type of Stress Do You Suffer From?
Diagnosing Your Stress Reflex
Signs of Stress and How You Can Block Them
Beat Stress with Relaxation Training
Stress Management Through Relaxation
What Stress Can Do and How Melatonin Helps
Fear of Driving
Fear Of Driving
Mindfullness and Fear of Driving
Deep Breathing Techniques that Help With Anxiety While Driving
Kaizen: Stress-Free- Technique and Driving
Anxiety and Progressive Muscle Relaxation
Driving and Anxiety Attacks
Fear of Flying
Fear of Flying
Fear of Flying Warning Signs
How to Overcome your Fear of Flying.
More
Increased Risk of Heart Attack and Stroke
Finding a Therapist
What Medications to use to Stop Your Panic and Anxiety Attacks
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Managing Phobia
The Top 10 Most Common Phobias.
Understanding Depersonalization and What Can Be Done About It.
Visualization to Fight Anxious Thinking
Marijuana and Panic/Anxiety Attacks
What You Put In Your Body Can Prevent Anxiety
Agoraphobia
Gender Differences
Diagnostic Criteria
Association with Panic Attacks
Agoraphobia

Agoraphobia  is an anxiety disorder, often precipitated by the fear of having a panic attack in a setting from which there is no easy means of escape. As a result, sufferers of agoraphobia may avoid public and/or unfamiliar places. In severe cases, the sufferer may become confined to his or her home, experiencing difficulty traveling from this "safe place."


The word "agoraphobia" is an English adaptation of the Greek words agora (αγορά) and phobos (φόβος), and literally translates to "a fear of the marketplace."


Agoraphobia is a condition where the sufferer becomes anxious in environments that are unfamiliar or where he or she perceives that they have little control. Triggers for this anxiety may include crowds, wide open spaces, or traveling (even short distances). This anxiety is often compounded by a fear of social embarrassment, as the agoraphobic fears the onset of a panic attack and appearing distraught in public.


Agoraphobics may experience panic attacks in situations where they feel trapped, insecure, out of control or too far from their personal comfort zone. In severe cases, an agoraphobic may be confined to his or her home.  Many people with agoraphobia are comfortable seeing visitors in a defined space they feel they can control. Such people may live for years without leaving their homes, while happily seeing visitors in and working from their personal safety zones. If the agoraphobic leaves his or her safety zone, they may experience a panic attack.


The one-year prevalence of agoraphobia in the United States is about 5 percent.  According to the National Institute of Mental Health, approximately 3.2 million Americans ages 18-54 have agoraphobia at any given time. About one third of people with panic disorder progress to develop agoraphobia.

Gender differences

Agoraphobia occurs about twice as commonly among women as it does in men. The gender difference may be attributable to social-cultural factors that encourage, or permit, the greater expression of avoidant coping strategies by women. Other theories include the ideas that women are more likely to seek help and therefore be diagnosed, that men are more likely to abuse alcohol as a reaction to anxiety and be diagnosed as an alcoholic, and that traditional female sex roles prescribe women to react to anxiety by engaging in dependent and helpless behaviors. Research results have not yet produced a single clear explanation as to the gender difference in agoraphobia.


Causes and Contributing Factors:


 The causes of agoraphobia are currently unknown. It is linked however to the presence of other anxiety disorders, a stressful environment or substance abuse. More women than men are affected. Chronic use of tranquillisers and sleeping pills such as benzodiazepines has been linked to causing agoraphobia. When benzodiazepine dependence has been treated and after a period of abstinence, agoraphobia symptoms gradually abate. Research has uncovered a linkage between agoraphobia and difficulties with spatial orientation. Normal individuals are able to maintain balance by combining information from their vestibular system, their visual system and their proprioceptive sense. A disproportionate number of agoraphobics have weak vestibular function and consequently rely more on visual or tactile signals. They may become disoriented when visual cues are sparse as in wide open spaces or overwhelming as in crowds. Likewise, they may be confused by sloping or irregular surfaces. Compared to controls, in virtual reality studies, agoraphobics on average show impaired processing of changing audiovisual data.


Diagnosis:


Most people who present to mental health specialists develop agoraphobia after the onset of panic disorder (American Psychiatric Association, 1998). Agoraphobia is best understood as an adverse behavioral outcome of repeated panic attacks and subsequent anxiety and preoccupation with these attacks that leads to an avoidance of situations where a panic attack could occur. In rare cases where agoraphobics do not meet the criteria used to diagnose Panic Disorder, the formal diagnosis of Agoraphobia Without History of Panic Disorder is used.

DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria

A) Anxiety about being in places or situations from which escape might be difficult (or embarrassing) or in which help may not be available in the event of having an unexpected or situationally predisposed panic attack or panic-like symptoms. Agoraphobic fears typically involve characteristic clusters of situations that include being outside the home alone; being in a crowd, or standing in a line; being on a bridge; and traveling in a bus, train, or automobile.


B) The situations are avoided (e.g., travel is restricted) or else are endured with marked distress or with anxiety about having a panic attack or panic-like symptoms, or require the presence of a companion.


C) The anxiety or phobic avoidance is not better accounted for by another mental disorder, such as Social Phobia (e.g., avoidance limited to social situations because of fear of embarrassment), Specific Phobia (e.g., avoidance limited to a single situation like elevators), Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (e.g., avoidance of dirt in someone with an obsession about contamination), Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (e.g., avoidance of stimuli associated with a severe stressor), or Separation Anxiety Disorder (e.g., avoidance of leaving home or relatives).

Association with panic attacks

Agoraphobia patients can experience sudden panic attacks when traveling to places where they fear they are out of control, help would be difficult to obtain, or they could be embarrassed. During a panic attack, epinephrine is released in large amounts, triggering the body's natural fight-or-flight response. A panic attack typically has an abrupt onset, building to maximum intensity within 10 to 15 minutes, and rarely lasts longer than 30 minutes.  Symptoms of a panic attack include palpitations, a rapid heartbeat, sweating, trembling, vomiting, dizziness, tightness in the throat and shortness of breath. Many patients report a fear of dying or of losing control of emotions and/or behavior.

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