I am a 29 year old male. I smoke and drink occasionally. I have chronic headaches due to trigger points in my
neckCervical spondylosis
Head and neck glands
Herpes zoster (shingles) on the neck and cheek
Irritated seborrheic kerotosis - neck
Lymph tissue in the head and neck.
Melanoma - neck
Neck lump
Neck pain
Neck pulse
Neck x-ray
Oral cancer and take
dimenhydrinate a couple of times a week for the nausea the headaches inevitably cause. I have anxiety as well. I'm not extremely active but I am not overweight.
I suffer from heart
palpitationsHeart palpitations. I miss a beat or get an
extraExtra strength mylanta calci tabs
Extra strength pain relief one. There are times (maybe once a month or every two months) where the
palpitationsHeart palpitations -or PVC's(?) as I've seen them called - are pretty much constant for a day or two. Maybe 4
extraExtra strength mylanta calci tabs
Extra strength pain relief beats a minute whenever I breathe deeply. Sometimes they occur when I lay on my left side. My doctor told me once that those instances could be from cold medication and I was wondering if the dimenhydrinate might be having the same effect as well. The paliptations/PVC's/extra/skipped beats then go away for weeks or months except for the odd time I get one. My blood pressure is fine and I had an EKG about two months ago. They said everything was fine. I tried to get them to go into more detail about what was going on, but it being an emergency room, they had other priorities. I don't really have any other symptoms other than some shortness of breath that I figure is caused by smoking, anxiety and a seemingly chronic congested nose.
Needless to say, all of this is quite worrisome to me.
I guess my question is this: If I wasn't experiencing any palpitations-PVC's-extra beats during the EKG, was the test pointless? What could they tell from that test? Would you suggest any other tests?
Thank you in advance for taking the time to read this...
Aaro
1) Stop smoking.
2) Start exercising.
3) See a counselor to deal with anxiety.
Thanks
Anxiety is caused basically by our misperceptions of reality, combined with autonomic reactions to those misperceptions. Anxiety can also be caused by a chemical imbalance as well.
If Aastar has generalized anxiety disorder then it would be helpful to see not only a counselor but a good psychiatrist. There are meds that deal very well with GAD that are not addictive and have little or no side effects. GAD can be caused by chemical imbalances much like depression. Indeed some anti-depressants also deal with anxiety disorders.
I am a pastor and have done a significant amount of counseling and I would ask one basic question, "What are you afraid of?"
Identify the fears and then begin to deal with each one of them in constructive ways. Don't try to deal with all of them at one time, but just one at a time.
Second I would take some biofeedback courses. As I said sometimes when we get into a panic attack the body kind of takes over. If a person can learn to control breathing and learn to relax it is possible to shut down that reaction. This can often give people confidence to overcome just the idea of a panic attack. As they say sometimes we have nothing to fear but fear itself.
You seem to be generalizing your situation and stating that everyone has the same experience. And if you figured out how to overcome your anxiety then that's just great. Not everyone is so fortunate.
And although you couldn't identify in particular fear related to your panic attacks many other people can. For example I had a partner that got stressed out so bad with work one day he had a panic attack. Was he afraid of something? You bet. He was afraid of not getting his work done! We had to figure out a way to lighten that load.
But here's the predicament that people often get into. Some people have so much anxiety all the time their body is always close to a fight-flight. This can result in panic attacks coming and going because the body chemistry is out of whack. Indeed they can just come and go without any apparent reason. The original source or cause of the panic attacks cannot be readily identified. But generally there is an original reason and source. Note I said GENERALLY.
Also I did not suggest that EVERYONE or even that MOST would be benefited by meds. But the fact is SOME people are helped by meds.
This is exactly why someone who is dealing with constant anxiety should go to a good counselor-psychiatrist so as to diagnose what the anxiety is coming from and what the proper treatment should consist of.
And if you seem to have figured out THE SOLUTION you should become a counselor. You could help a lot of people.
Just because YOU were helped by one particular idea, concept, or whatever doesn't mean everyone is in the same situation.
As for "find a good psychiatrist", this is fine if you have the money and very good insurance and the shrink will take HIS TIME with you, but if you have an HMO insurance they tell you WHO to see, and the one I saw had me in and out of his office in 3 minutes tops, the minute I walked in he already had the prescription pad ready with ink pen in his hand and hardly even looked at me never mind was interested about my situation. He handed me the prescription which was for "Xanax" and said "this will be your security blanket" see you in a month for a refill. My husband spent enough money on therapists to get me help which our insurance did not cover he for damn sure couldn't afford a "good" shrink on top of it. Thank god for a magazine which caused me to come across an article about Dr. Weeks who became my life saver, and her book was a hell of a lot cheaper.
To dquenzer: Your remark "why I don't counsel people" or something like that I've told people about these books and they can't thank me enough, Dr. Weeks can do it even better than I ever could, and yet they were people who simple refuse to read a book because they claim "I don't have time to read a book". As for deadlines and work loads I agree they too bring out panic attacks and have in me that is why I changed jobs and took a huge pay cut, and lost all my excellent benefits I had with this job. I had a very stressful job with multiple deadlines and my heart skipped none stop. Lots of people with panic attacks are "perfectionists" and take their work load and deadlines a lot more serious than some people without panic attacks. I changed jobs my husband and I decided we will settle for less because my health was more important to him, me and my family. I also make sure that I get to the airport an hour before what the airlines require i.e. if they say we have to be there 2 hrs before I am there 3 hrs before. I get to my dr. appointments half an hour earlier than I'm suppose to. Even though Dr. Weeks taught me how to "accept" without "fighting" a panic attack why do the things who bring one on if you can avoid them/or change your life style? Now I do understand that there are people who cannot afford to give up their stressful jobs with multiple deadlines for whatever reasons and I understand that but lots of people could and don't want to because the money and benefits are so good.
Thanks
Good luck to you!
I feel that medication is overprescribed - mainly by doctors who don't know what they're doing with regards to treating mental disorders. And a lot of the people taking said medications, are doing it blindly, without figuring out their problems. I guess there are two ways you can approach it. You can go to your doctor, tell him or her your symptoms, and accept what they tell you and give you. Or you can research on your own, figure out your problem and go from there. I did the latter and I'm glad I did. I'm glad that, while I suffer from this horrible anxiety, I really have come to understand myself on a very deep level. And I think that when I sort everything out, I'll come out of this a person with much more depth than I'd possess had I not gone through it.
Psychiatrists, psychologists, therapists - that's a tricky one. It's so important to find someone intelligent enough to understand you. Intelligent enough to not be fooled by you. Intelligent enough to not waste your time and your money. This has been a problem of mine. Quite a few times I've gone into appointments and left them feeling so misunderstood. My most recent attempt at therapy was a couple months ago. I'd seen this therapist ten years ago when all of my problems began. I was impressed then with his intelligence and his understanding. He made me feel like, with his guidance, my fears were something I could overcome on my own. Ten years later, it wasn't the same. I went in with very high hopes. I'd reached a point where I was absolutely sick of living the way I live. I had always been able to rationalize it. 'It's good for my creativity - good for my art' but I was lying to myself because I wasn't living anything that resembled a fulfilling life. All of my hopes of him helping me again were crushed when he gave me a test to fill out. It was a depression and anxiety checklist. I was 'severely depressed' and had 'moderate anxiety' and the therapist suggested medication as the only solution. I was shocked. He made this decision based on a test. He didn't ask me about my life. If he had, he'd have found out that I was horribly unhappy in my relationship, horribly unhappy with my career, anxious about being on the verge of 30 and on and on. Had he taken the time to ask, he surely would have said "No WONDER you're depressed! Let's work on these things." He must have thought I was just another everyday patient who doesn't have a clue about his or her problem. I didn't make another appointment. I walked out feeling oddly empowered. It's like I wasn't in as bad a shape as I thought I was. I'm still leading a horribly unhappy life though.
Medication has it's place. Sometimes it's the only way and sometimes people don't want to be bothered with therapy and the suffering of working through their problems. But I do think it's horribly over-prescribed. Given to people who, through no fault of their own, place too much trust in a family doctor or therapist.
Jodie