Who is More
Likely to Suffer from a Panic Attack?
Nearly one-third of
Americans, or more than one hundred million people living in
the United States, has suffered from a panic attack sometime or
other during their life. There are many
reasons why this may be so, researchers are still trying to
sort out answers to this question, but among people who are
chronic sufferers, there appears to be several
commonalities.
Most of those who are
chronic sufferers have jobs that are either very physically or
mentally challenging, leading to a great deal of
stress.
When stress levels are high,
and one does not have the ability to simply pull away from the
situation and relax, the body often times goes into overdrive,
a condition that, if occurring to often, can lead an individual
to overheat, much like a car would do. In an
individual, however, this overheating takes its form in a panic
attack.
The heart will being
to race, palms will grow sweaty, and a general feeling of gloom
will preside, forcing the individual to step back from whatever
he or she was doing, take a breather, and
relax. For this reason, it is also important
that a highly stressed individual occasionally take some time
off.
Without any time off,
there is never any down time and, just the opposite, a person
is continually on the go, which can have adverse side effects
and could potentially trigger a panic
attack.
Aside from these jobs,
there are also several personality traits that doctors believe
can contribute to a person experiencing a panic
attack. People who are extremely analytical,
are obsessive, emotionally sensitive, or need to be in control
at all times are also more likely to experience a panic attack
than their counterparts who are not like
this.
The primary reason
people with these personality traits are more likely to
experience a panic attack is because these people are likely to
focus all of their attention on a single issue; and when this
issue is no longer under their control, they are likely to
freak out, thereby resulting in a panic
attack.
There is, in other
words, either an obsessive or compulsive aspect to all of these
personality traits and it is these qualities that are most
prone to trigger a panic attack. Although it
may be hard to alter one’s personality, there are a number of
preventative ways to do so, whether they are natural or
proscribed by a doctor.
Those with irrational
phobias, such as fear of heights, spiders, or other mundane
aspects of life, moreover, are also more prone to panic
attacks. Someone who is overly afraid of
spiders, for example, may tremble, sweat, and have trouble
breathing whenever he or she sees a spider, which, as is well
known, are all too common.
These phobias stem
from some negative previous encounter with the object of fear
and, as a result, are usually difficult to overcome unless one
seeks some sort of medical treatment, like seeing a
psychologist. Without the help of some
medical profession, the chances one will be able to overcome a
phobia, and thereby curtail panic attacks, is very
slim.
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