Life Experience & Anxiety : Interesting
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| Tue, 08-15-2006 - 11:09am |
People who are extremely anxious may think that a trying experience has given them reason to feel that way. And to a large degree, they’re right.
Lingering effects
As mentioned earlier, a traumatic event is often a trigger for acute stress disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and specific phobias. Either of the two stress disorders usually begins within days of a terrifying experience. While phobias may not develop immediately after a traumatic event, they can often be traced back to one. For example, many adults who fear dogs were attacked by dogs as youngsters. (See Early Emotional Traumas
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There is growing evidence that highly stressful experiences, especially those that occur early in life, increase the risk for anxiety by impairing a person’s ability to negotiate emotional bumps in the road later on. Such experiences include abuse or neglect, emotional deprivation, and enduring the loss of or separation from one’s mother. Studies show that rat pups separated from their mothers for just several minutes early in life have a much greater startle response than other pups when faced with stress several months later.
Traumas seem to alter the brain in a way that makes it more susceptible to anxiety. In addition to making the HPA axis hypersensitive (see Hormones and the HPA Axis), they may also change the structure of the brain. The hippocampus, which works closely with the amygdala (the brain’s "fear" center), is smaller in people with post-traumatic stress disorder, as well as those who have endured extreme, prolonged stress. (See The Brain and Anxiety.)
Acting in concert
As mentioned earlier, not everyone who has survived a traumatic event develops an anxiety disorder. That’s where an individual’s genes and brain chemistry come in. One theory is that some people are genetically or biologically more susceptible to anxiety, but that it often takes a traumatic life event to serve as the catalyst. In the study of the 5-HTT gene (see What Causes Anxiety?), people with a particular gene variation all developed anxiety symptoms only after being faced with a fear-inducing situation.
In some cases, the trauma or stress is not apparent. Some people seem to develop an anxiety disorder "out of the blue." But when they seek help, a mental health professional may discover clues suggesting an undiagnosed anxiety disorder experienced in childhood. For example, a 20-year-old with generalized anxiety disorder (see Generalized Anxiety Disorder) may have been a 3-year-old who had a hard time being away from her parents when they left for work (separation anxiety). However, trauma is not always a trigger. Some people who develop an anxiety disorder have not endured particularly stressful events.

