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Generalized Anxiety Disorder |
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Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is much more than the normal
anxiety people experience day to day. It's chronic and fills one's
day with exaggerated worry and tension, even though there is little
or nothing to provoke it. Having this disorder means always
anticipating disaster, often worrying excessively about health,
money, family, or work. Sometimes, though, the source of the worry
is hard to pinpoint. Simply the thought of getting through the day
provokes anxiety.
People with GAD can't seem to shake their concerns, even though they
usually realize that their anxiety is more intense than the
situation warrants. Their worries are accompanied by physical
symptoms, especially fatigue, headaches, muscle tension, muscle
aches, difficulty swallowing, trembling, twitching, irritability,
sweating, and hot flashes. People with GAD may feel lightheaded or
out of breath. They also may feel nauseated or have to go to the
bathroom frequently.
Individuals with GAD seem unable to relax, and they may startle more
easily than other people. They tend to have difficulty
concentrating, too. Often, they have trouble falling or staying
asleep.
Unlike people with several other anxiety disorders, people with GAD
don't characteristically avoid certain situations as a result of
their disorder. When impairment associated with GAD is mild, people
with the disorder may be able to function in social settings or on
the job. If severe, however, GAD can be very debilitating, making it
difficult to carry out even the most ordinary daily activities.
GAD affects about 4 million adult Americans and about twice as many
women as men. The disorder comes on gradually and can begin across
the life cycle, though the risk is highest between childhood and
middle age. It is diagnosed when someone spends at least 6 months
worrying excessively about a number of everyday problems. There is
evidence that genes play a modest role in GAD.
(Source NIMH)

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