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Anxiety is a feeling of being keyed up and extra alert.
Your heart may race or you may get butterflies in
your stomach. You may feel short of breath or generally
jittery. You're likely to have a feeling of impending
danger.
These reactions are the way our bodies
prepare to cope with stress. All the senses become tuned up and
on alert in the presence of a threat. These reactions derive
from the primitive fight or flight response that
enabled early humans to deal quickly with dangerous
situations.
Everyone is likely to have that kind of
anxiety response in urgent situations, such as a fire or other
emergency. But we also get these feelings in the course of our
daily routines. Time pressures, traffic tieups, social
jitters, a new job, or waiting for test results can all produce
anxious feelings; and these feelings are normal and
healthy.
But anxiety ceases to be positive when it
is painful or prolonged, or when the response is out of
proportion to the cause. When anxiety interferes with your
daily life or when it becomes incapacitating fear, it becomes
an illness called an anxiety disorder.
Causes of Anxiety
Disorder
The causes of anxiety disorder are not
clear. Researchers are currently investigating a number of
factors including chemical imbalances, enzyme deficiencies,
hormones, the role of emotional traumas, and the interaction
between emotions and brain chemistry.
Next:
Diagnosing Anxiety
Disorder |