General Anxiety Disorder.

 

What are anxiety Disorders?

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Worry is a thin stream of fear trickling through the mind. If encouraged, it cuts a channel into which all other thoughts are drained.
Arthur Somers Roche

Today is the tomorrow we worried about yesterday. 
Author Unknown

 

This disorder presents with pervading chronic feelings of anxiety generally less severe than the acute anxiety experienced by the sufferers of panic attacks and panic disorder. The anxiety presents as persistent worries but not associated with anxieties of an OC nature or worries related to other anxiety disorders such as worries about going shopping for an agoraphobic. In GAD worries are more of a general nature seeming more normal and rational except for the fact that they are exaggerated and more persistent. In other words the afflicted person is a chronic worrier and always has something to worry about seeming to get over one concern only to replace it by another and never able to dismiss the worries from his or her mind. GAD often exists co morbidly with other anxiety disorders and depression.  Also the anxiety present in GAD many be free floating and undefined presenting as nagging background worry with no specific precipitating trigger such as a worrying thought or circumstance. Symptoms of GAD may include some or all of the following:

  • Persistent feelings of anxiety.

  • Fatigue.

  • Muscle tension

  • Sleep disturbances.

  • Difficulty concentrating.

  • Irritability.