The Lasting
Effects of Panic Attacks
Panic attacks can last
anywhere between two and six minutes and, although they are
generally thought to be over once the attack concludes, there
can be several long-term effects that linger on much
later. One of the main long-term effects
involves flashbacks, where an individual goes back to the time
when the panic attack first took place, experiencing with this
a return to the negative feelings he or she felt at the time of
the attack. Aside from this, a second
long-term effect that may arise concerns the use of drugs that
were first used to curtail the panic attacks when they first
occurred. Weaning an individual off of any
prescription drug may cause bodily reactions that were
unexpected, or may even lead to further complications that were
not originally considered.
Flashbacks, or returning to
a previous point while once again encountering the emotions
associated with this previous point, are one of the most common
long-term effects of a flashback. Often
times, a person who has experienced a flashback, describes
sensations similar to what took place at the time of the
original attack. Perhaps the worst part
about flashbacks is that they do not just occur once, but can
occur any number of times.
Moreover, there is no
forewarning, so an individual never knows when he or she is
about to experience one. Despite this, many
doctors agree that there are certain events that may trigger a
flashback. Going back to the spot where a
previous attack occurred, or engaging in recreational drugs,
may trigger flashbacks, although there is even some dissent
concerning whether this is true or not.
Still, there is no real way to avoid a
flashback.
Reports have indicated,
furthermore, that time does not ensure that one will not have a
flashback, as some people have stated that they have had
flashbacks five, even ten years after the original panic attack
first took place. In a word, flashbacks tend
to throw an otherwise perfectly healthy individual into a high
state of confusion, can be quite scary, and are virtually
unavoidable.
A second long-term
consequence of panic attacks relates to the drugs that an
individual may take in order to prevent them from occurring in
the first place. Because of the potency of
many prescription drugs, and because one’s body tends to grow
reliant upon them, there can be many serious long-term side
effects when these drugs are no longer
needed. Aside from acne and weight-gain,
which are relatively minor, no longer taking a certain drug can
lead to drastic mood swings, feelings of depression, seizures,
and even suicidal tendencies.
These drugs alter the mind
and when they are no longer needed, the mind may not know how
to adjust, therefore causing these several, unexpected problems
to arise. Many doctors, because of this,
suggest that when a patient taking drugs to stop panic attacks
no longer needs them, that the drugs be removed gradually and
over time in order to prevent a patient from having serious
long-term side effects that they may carry on for the rest of
their lives.
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