Many
people with anxiety disorders can be helped with treatment. Therapy for anxiety
disorders often involves medication or specific forms of psychotherapy.
Medications, although not cures, can be very effective at relieving anxiety
symptoms. Today, thanks to research by scientists at NIMH and other research
institutions, there are more medications available than ever before to treat
anxiety disorders. So if one drug is not successful, there are usually others
to try. In addition, new medications to treat anxiety symptoms are under
development.
For most of the medications that are prescribed to treat anxiety disorders,
the doctor usually starts the patient on a low dose and gradually increases it
to the full dose. Every medication has side effects, but they usually become
tolerated or diminish with time. If side effects become a problem, the doctor
may advise the patient to stop taking the medication and to wait a week—or
longer for certain drugs—before trying another one. When treatment is near an
end, the doctor will taper the dosage gradually.
Research has also shown that behavioral therapy and cognitive-behavioral
therapy can be effective for treating several of the anxiety disorders.
Behavioral therapy focuses on changing specific actions and uses several
techniques to decreases or stop unwanted behavior. For example, one technique
trains patients in diaphragmatic breathing, a special breathing exercise
involving slow, deep breaths to reduce anxiety. This is necessary because
people who are anxious often hyperventilate, taking rapid shallow breaths that
can trigger rapid heartbeat, lightheadedness, and other symptoms. Another
technique—exposure therapy—gradually exposes patients to what frightens them
and helps them cope with their fears.
Like behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy teaches patients to
react differently to the situations and bodily sensations that trigger panic
attacks and other anxiety symptoms. However, patients also learn to understand
how their thinking patterns contribute to their symptoms and how to change
their thoughts so that symptoms are less likely to occur. This awareness of
thinking patterns is combined with exposure and other behavioral techniques to
help people confront their feared situations. For example, someone who becomes
lightheaded during a panic attack and fears he is going to die can be helped
with the following approach used in cognitive-behavioral therapy. The therapist
asks him to spin in a circle until he becomes dizzy. When he becomes alarmed
and starts thinking, "I'm going to die," he learns to replace that thought with
a more appropriate one, such as "It's just a little dizziness—I can handle it."
IMMEDIATE ANXIETY RELIEF –
A NEW NATURAL TREATMENT