Anxiety Disorders: OCD, PTSD, Panic Attack, Agoraphobia, Phobias, GAD Generalized

http://www.stomponstep1.com/anxiety-disorders-ocd-ptsd-panic-attack-agoraphobia-phobias-gad-generalized/ SKIP AHEAD: 0:25 – Anxiety Definition & Symptoms 1:13 – Anxiety Differential Diagnosis 2:12 – Generalized Anxiety (GAD) 3:05 – Panic Attacks, Panic Disorder & Agoraphobia 5:01 – Specific Phobia & Social Anxiety Disorder (Social Phobia) 7:55 – Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) 9:29 – Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)Anxiety is uncontrolled fear, nervousness and/or worry about trivial or non-existent things. It is an unpleasant fear of future events that are unlikely to occur. Some patients have insight and realize that their uneasiness is illogical, but that does not alleviate symptoms. A certain level of anxiety is considered normal in many situations, but frequent anxiety or anxiety that inhibits function is pathologic.During anxiety sympathetic nervous system activation can result in physical symptoms such as Palpitations, Tachycardia, Shortness of breath, Muscle tension, Restlessness, Lack of focus, Sweating or chills and Changes in sleeping pattern.In order to make a diagnosis of anxiety, one must rule out other potential causes of these symptoms. The differential diagnosis for anxiety includes other psychiatric disorders, cardiac abnormalities (such as myocardial infarction or valvular disease), endocrine disorders (like hyperthyroidism) and respiratory disease (such as asthma or Pulmonary Embolism). Substances such as street drugs and prescribed medications must also be ruled out as a potential cause of the symptoms. We are going to hold off on discussing most of the different treatment options for anxiety until a later video that will cover all of pharmacology for the psychiatry section. That video will cover things like SSRIs, anxiolytics and cognitive behavioral therapy which can be used to treat anxiety disorders. However, during this video I will mention a couple treatment options that are used for specific anxiety disorders.We will start our discussion with Generalized Anxiety Disorder or GAD. You can see here in the top right corner I give GAD a high yield rating of 2. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the High Yield Rating it is a scale from 0 to 10 that gives you an estimate for how important each topic is for the USMLE Step 1 Medical Board Exam. GAD is a prolonged period of near constant anxiety. Their anxiety is not linked to a specific item, person, or situation (AKA it isn’t a phobia).They usually worry about a wide variety of things including school/work performance, finances, health, friends and/or family members. Their anxiety is “generalized” across many situations. Their anxiety frequently presents with “physical” symptoms and may be severe enough to impair function.A Panic Attack is sudden onset period of extremely intense anxiety accompanied by numerous signs and symptoms of anxiety. The attack is often associated with a sense of impending doom. These “episodes” usually last 10 to 30 minutes and are disabling. The patient returns to their normal level of function soon after the panic attack. They may be brought on by an inciting event or be completely unprovoked. I’d like to stop here for a moment to clarify the difference between generalized anxiety disorder and a panic attack. GAD can be thought of as a constant moderate level of anxiety while panic attacks are short periods of severe anxiety.Panic Disorder is recurrent panic attacks that are unprovoked and have no identifiable trigger. The onset of these anxiety episodes is unpredictable. Patients may be relatively asymptomatic between attacks, but often have anxiety about having more attacks. Their fear is related to the panic attacks themselves rather than a particular external stimuli. This differentiates Panic Disorder from Panic Attacks that are caused by things like phobias.The text for this video is too long and exceeds the maximum allowed by youtube. For the rest of it please click here http://www.stomponstep1.com/anxiety-disorders-ocd-ptsd-panic-attack-agoraphobia-phobias-gad-generalized/

Anxiety Causing Fatigue, Muscle Tension, or Exhaustion?

Is Anxiety Causing you Fatigue, Muscle Tension, Tiredness, Weakness, or Exhaustion? SUBSCRIBE TO IMPROVEMENT PATH! https://bit.ly/38Tr63M You are not alone! Improvement Path does an amazing job explaining the process!If you are interested in anxiety life coaching, email me cullintreyjones@yahoo.com (Only for those who are serious about recovery) You get an hour call,, minimum an extensive and downloadable personalized strategy, email support and my book “Anxiety Symptoms Explained.”GET YOUR THYROID AND HORMONES CHECKED! Use promo TREYJONES20 for 20% off medical tests that are sent to your home! You then get the results in 2-5 days online! https://bit.ly/2T1FzGj Certain diseases or conditions can cause or copy cat anxiety symptoms.(I recommend thyroid, hormone, and vitamin testing!) Always smart to get initial reassurance to be safe!ONLINE THERAPY https://bit.ly/2QkBUPK FREE TO SIGN UP! CHEAPER AND MORE CONVINENT FROM HOME!So how do we overcome anxiety or beat anxiety disorder? These are tips that you should be trying every single day to stop your anxiety! Dont skip any days and remember that there will still be bad days. Its how we handle the bad days, that determines how we progress in our mental health. First, discover and work on your root causes of anxiety! Practice gratitude everyday! Everyone has something to be thankful for! Make sure you are exercising daily, eating healthy, keeping a journal, taking a multivitamin, practicing meditation in the mornings and evenings, practicing cbt, keep counseling or therapy as an option, watch positive affirmation and asmr videos, join online support groups, and most importantly do this everyday and dont give up! Thank you so much for the comment, please keep in touch, and please Subscribe if you haven’t gotten the chance!My Recommended BEST Books, Workbooks, Vitamins and Weighted Blankets For Anxiety, Panic Attacks, Health Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Depression and Addiction Recovery! https://www.amazon.com/shop/treyjonesTip Jar! (Thank You) https://bit.ly/38mIw9l Anxiety, Stress & Panic Attack Support Group: https://bit.ly/2uCnNMC Health Anxiety Support & Recovery Group: https://bit.ly/36eUeBa Anxiety Stress & Panic Attack Tips & Recovery Group: https://bit.ly/33Xk8YA Anxiety Instagram: https://bit.ly/2k7ipz6 Email:cullintreyjones@yahoo.com Snapchat: https://www.snapchat.com/add/cullintrey Snapchat Username: cullintrey Twitter: https://twitter.com/treyjones98***Disclamer*** I am not a doctor or a licensed mental health professional. This material is based off of my life experiences and further research for educational purposes. I encourge you to always seek help from a professional and this content is not mean’t to replace that!If affiliate links are present, I receive a small fee!

Science Documentary: Mental Disorders, Brain Trauma, Stress and Anxiety, a Documentary on the Brain

Science Documentary: Mental Health Disorders, Brain Trauma, Stress and Anxiety, a Documentary on the BrainDealing with mental health disorders is one of the greatest challenges facing governments around the globe. Diseases such as alzheimers and depression rob the individual and society of mental capital and well being. One in four people suffer from a mental health disorder. Disorders like alzheimers, schizophrenia, depression, mania, etc. , impact our cognitive functioning. And as a result, it impacts how we function in our homes and at work. So it is imperative to detect these disorders early, and treat them early.There are two types of cognition. There is cold or rational cognition, and hot cognition. Cold cognition helps us make the majority of our decisions in our daily life. Hot cognition helps us with making social decisions and emotional decisions.There are key areas of the brain that respond to stress and trigger anxiety. The thalamus is the area of the brain that responds to sights and sounds. The thalamus breaks down things we see by size, shape and color and then sends a signal to the cerebral cortex. This gives the things we see meaning and enables us to be conscious of what we are seeing or hearing. The prefrontal cortex is very important for stopping the anxiety response after a threat has gone away. The section of the brain that is responsible for emotion is the amygdala. The amygdala’s primary function is to trigger the fear response. The bed nucleus of the striaterminals prepetuates the fear response the locus ceruleus receives a signal from the amygdala and causes rapid heart beat, sweating, pupil dilation and other classic anxiety responses. The hippocampus is the part of the brain that stores memory or emotional baggage derived from stressful situations. Stress, anxiety, and fear are triggered through your senses. Fear is a essential, and very useful, response; whereas anxiety is something that is completely irrational.You think with your brain, and ideas are not floating in air. So how do you get ideas from neurons? Because you think with your brain, every idea you have is physical, and is given by a neural circuit in the brain. Many of those neural circuits are fixed for life, and so are the things you learn early on in life and very often they are metaphorical ideas. So if you do not have a neural circuit for understanding an idea, you wont understand it at all. The classical view of what reason actually is, has failed. And that view says that all reason is conscious, but in fact, 98% is unconscious. This is because the brain functions in parallel and reason, or consciousness, functions linearly. Many things are happening inside your brain and you don’t even truly understand why they are there. People mostly think in frames and metaphors. Metaphors are not in language, but are in thought.Science Documentary: Anti-angiogenesis, Immunotherapy, Vaccines
Science Documentary: Creating Brain Systems,Quantum Computing, Quantum mechanics and Consciousness
Science Documentary: Personalized Medicine, Synthetic Biology , a documentary on genetic design
Science Documentary: Stem Cells,Regenerative Medicine,Artificial Heart,a future medicine documentary
Science Documentary: Cognitive science , a documentary on mind processes, artificial intelligence
Science Documentary: 3D Printing, 3D Imaging, Ultra Fast Laser Imaging Technology
Science Documentary: Flexible Tech, Flexible Wearable Technology, a Documentary on Future Technology
Science Documentary: Artificial Intelligence, Cloud Robots, Trusting Technology
Science Documentary: Augmented Reality, Nanotechnology, Artificial Intelligence
Science Documentary:Future Scenarios, Nanotechnology, Carbon Nanotubes, Nanomagnetism

Why use an SNRI for anxiety disorder when norepinephrine is stimulating?

This video brought to you by Dr. Carlo Carandang, MD and AnxietyBoss.com, and explains why SNRIs (serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors) are effective for anxiety, despite norepinephrine being stimulating.

Anxiety Medications

Dr. Mark Faber talks about the different medications that can be used to treat anxiety, both in teens and adults.

Psychiatry Lecture: Anxiety Disorders

A presentation on ‘Anxiety Disorders’ that systematically goes through the Clinical features (1:41), Epidemiology (14:22), Aetiology (17:15), Assessment (30:07), Management (34:06) and Prognosis (45:41) of the following disorders:1. Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) 2. Panic Disorder 3. Phobias 4. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) 5. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)The presentation finishes with a set of 5 self-assessment MCQs. (48:50)This video has been prepared by: Dr. S. Rajagopal MBBS, DPM (Ireland), MRCPsych (UK), CCST (UK) Consultant Psychiatrist Chennai, Tamil Nadu, INDIADisclaimer This video is provided for educational / informational purposes only. This is not a substitute for professional medical consultation. Psychiatry, like other medical specialities, is a constantly evolving field. I cannot give any guarantee that the information in this video is accurate or up to date. I assume no responsibility for any omissions or errors.More details about Dr. Rajagopal can be found at http://psychiatristinchennai.blogspot.in/

OCD and Anxiety Disorders: Crash Course Psychology #29

Want more videos about psychology every Monday and Thursday? Check out our sister channel SciShow Psych at https://www.youtube.com/scishowpsych!***Ever call someone OCD because they like to have a clean apartment? Ever tell someone you have a phobia of spiders when, in fact, they just creep you out a little? In this episode of Crash Course psychology, Hank talks about OCD and Anxiety Disorders in the hope we’ll understand what people with actual OCD have to deal with as well as how torturous Anxiety Disorders and Panic Attacks can actually be. — Table of Contents:What Defines an Anxiety Disorder 01:55:20 Symptoms of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder 02:35:07 Generalized Anxiety Disorder 04:05:18 Panic Disorder and Phobias 04:47:20 The Learning Perspective 07:38:20 The Biological Perspective 09:13:14 Don’t Use OCD as a Punch Line 00:00:00— Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet? Facebook – http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Twitter – http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse Tumblr – http://thecrashcourse.tumblr.com Support CrashCourse on Subbable: http://subbable.com/crashcourse

4 ways to cope with anxiety

Dr. Sandra Mendlowitz, a Psychologist at SickKids, talks about anxiety and gives children and parents 4 tips to cope with anxiety.

APS Award Address: Coming to Terms with Fear and Anxiety

At the 2015 APS Annual Convention, APS William James Fellow, Joseph E. LeDoux, discussed emotion, fear, and anxiety.

How to Beat Test Anxiety and Take on Exams Without Stress

Exams can cause a lot of unnecessary stress, but you can reduce that stress in several ways.In this video, we’ll look at several common worries you’ll face as a student that cause test anxiety, and cover ways to deal with them.Want more tips on how to ace your exams? Here are the two other videos I mentioned:My video on acing your finals: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWUUP5p0AuoSimon’s video on exam technique: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ob9TMDnB31IGet my book “10 Steps to Earning Awesome Grades” FREE:
Want to Earn Better Grades?
Follow Me: Instagram ➔ https://instagram.com/tomfrankly Twitter ➔ https://twitter.com/tomfrankly Podcast ➔ https://www.youtube.com/TheCollegeInfoGeekPodcastSubscribe to My Channel: http://buff.ly/1vQP5arCompanion blog post with even more detail:
How to Overcome Test Anxiety – 5 Strategies That Work
Links from the Video:University of Chicago study: https://news.uchicago.edu/story/writing-about-worries-eases-anxiety-and-improves-test-performanceKoofers Test Bank: https://www.koofers.com/testbankThe Student Success Triangle: https://collegeinfogeek.com/student-success-triangle/~ created by Thomas Frank