January/February
2007
journey in our search for healing
Anxiety: It's All In Your Head...
Or Is It?
By Wendy Underhill
We all know what anxiety is--that jittery, uneasy, fearful feeling that
often goes hand-in-hand with physical symptoms, such as shakiness, excessive
sweating, heart palpitations, shortness of breath, even gastrointestinal
symptoms and insomnia.
Most of us will experience garden-variety anxiety at some time in our
lives. “How will I do on that test tomorrow?” “What
will my new boss think of my work?” These are typical, low-level
responses to potentially stressful situations. But when anxiety gets out
of hand, manifesting in the form of phobias, panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive
behaviors, it can be debilitating, sometimes even life threatening.
As widespread as anxiety has become, no one knows exactly what causes
it. In everyday usage, “anxiety” is often thought of as the
outcome of an overwrought personality or character flaw. With an outlook
like that, there's not much hope for the anxious except to “buck
up” and “be strong” – hardly helpful advice to
anyone who is suffering.
In the mental health world, “anxiety disorders,” including
phobias, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, post-traumatic
stress disorder, and others, are thought to be caused by a combination
of psychological and biological factors. Not surprisingly, then, the traditional
approach to treating anxiety is a combination of talk therapy with psychotropic
medications added for moderate to severe cases.
Sometimes talk therapy is enough. Rick, a former Boulderite, began waking
up at night with to-do lists racing through his mind. He sought help from
a therapist, and with just a few sessions of talk therapy about his job
and his responses to it, he was back to sleep. The causes of his anxiety
were entirely situational, and the solution was entirely cognitive/ behavioral;
in other words, his problem was indeed “all in his head.”
Beyond short term situations such as Rick's, many forms of anxiety can
be traced to psychological factors. An obvious example: post traumatic
stress disorder. Some people who have witnessed or experienced a life-threatening
event (war, sexual assault, natural disasters, and more) continue to have
flash-backs, feel detached from loved ones, and, in general, suffer from
months or years of anxiety. Long-term exposure to abusive situations can
have the same psychological effect, as can negative thinking, poor coping
skills, dependency, or learned fears. However, if you've tried therapy
and even medication, and you've had little or no relief, your anxiety
may not be all in your head.
It's not all in your head
New thinking suggests that many people with the set of symptoms commonly
known as anxiety may not have a particular temperament or mental disorder,
but rather suffer from physical conditions whose symptoms mimic classically-defined
“anxiety.” In other words, anxiety is often not a product
of the mind so much as a product of the body.
Take Sharon Heller, Ph.D., for instance. For 12 years, she coped with
nearly incapacitating anxiety. Through many visits to health practitioners
of many stripes, she learned that she was still experiencing the effects
of a head injury suffered 15 years earlier; a chronic GI tract problem;
a sensory-processing disorder; and lead poisoning from years of stained-glass
crafting. When she had these very physical causes treated, her “anxiety”
disappeared.
Heller, a developmental psychologist, has since written a book, The Anxiety
Myth: Why Your Anxiety May Not be All in Your Head but from Something
Physical (Symmetry, 2006). In a nutshell, the book says that anxiety symptoms
are not specific to mental disorders, and may be caused by neurological,
structural, sensory or environmental factors.
Heller's book outlines dozens of possible anxiety mimickers, among
them:
• Food. Caffeine can trigger anxiety-like symptoms, as can food
allergies, food intolerances, leaky gut syndrome and a wide variety of
other food-related causes. Even diabetes can mimic anxiety.
• Inner ear difficulties. 90 percent of space-related phobias turn
out to be related to inner ear dysfunction. If you had lots of ear infections
as a child, and now, as an adult, have phobias, get thee to an ear-nose-throat
specialist!
• Chemical sensitivities. People with sensitivity to chemicals,
like cleaning products, paint or mold, face a host of symptoms, including
shakiness, fatigue, cloudy thinking and worries about going outside the
controlled environment of home. Those symptoms sound a lot like anxiety.
• Thyroid problems. Thinning hair, low energy and a surprising weight
problem along with “anxiety” symptoms may be a sign that your
thyroid– not your brain--is causing your anxiety.
• Sensory processing. If sounds are too loud, lights too bright,
and touch seems to be an insult; if you're unusually disorganized; or
if focusing on one thing and excluding the multitude of stimulation around
is difficult, then any of a variety of sensory processing conditions may
be at work, and will almost assuredly make a person “anxious”
about everyday living.
The chemistry component
Once these body-based possibilities have been thoroughly ruled out, it's
time to look at the brain-based ones. Science is just beginning to understand
how neurotransmitters (naturally occurring chemicals within the brain
that relay signals between the nerve cells) and mood are interlinked.
Some day research may prove that brain-based anxieties are not “all
in your head” but rather “all in your chemistry” instead.
Science does know, though, that many mental disorders can be regulated
or at least altered by medications targeting neurotransmitters, especially
serotonin. For many people, medications called SSRIs, or selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors, have been a lifesaver. And yet, serotonin is only
one of many neurotransmitters and SSRIs are relatively blunt instruments
in the face of anxiety.
One Wisconsin-based company, NeuroScience, Inc. (www.neurorelief.com)
is trying to change that. It has developed urinary and salivary panels
that measure levels of serotonin and 12 other neurotransmitters as well.
Once levels are determined, the firm suggests supplement-based therapies.
(The fact that the company both diagnoses and prescribes may be seen as
a conflict of interest.) Since this testing is so new, a client may need
to explore this option first and then ask his or her medical provider
to consider these tests.
It's all connected
One final anecdote: When Lisa, of Denver, returned after an extended trip
to Central America she was sick with gastrointestinal distress that lasted
almost two years. Parasites seemed likely, but were never found. As Lisa
lost weight, she suffered irritable bowel syndrome and became lethargic.
Not surprisingly, she became worried about her condition, too. What was
it? Would it ever go away? Where was her true self hiding? While seeking
a biological cause, she found a doctor who treated her holistically: he
prescribed yoga, meditation and relaxation, all of which helped a bit.
But when the right medication for her GI condition was finally prescribed,
Lisa became her old self again.
That sounds like physiology at work, but there's more. Now, years later,
if Lisa gets too overtaxed with work, family, school and the fate of the
world, the medication can't hold back a recurrence. Lisa says her solution
has been a combined treatment: “If it weren't for the Western drugs,
I'd be in bad shape and if it weren't for the emphasis on relaxation and
wholeness, I'd also be in bad shape. It's 50-50.”
That makes sense if brains and bodies are considered as a single unit.
If you're incapacitated by a physical cause, psychological ramifications
result. If you have a debilitating psychological condition, the body responds
chemically, with physical outcomes. So, for anything beyond short-term
situational anxiety, treatment must deal with which came first, the physical
or the psychological--but not without addressing the other as well.
Wendy Underhill will be appearing at the Nexus Holistic Expo in Boulder,
February 10 to 11, 2007. For more information on the Expo, see page 5
or visit www.nexusholisticexpo.com
A Natural Approach
Anyone who is suffering from anxiety-like symptoms has a big job to do
to figure out where the trouble lies, in the brain or in the body. While
searching, these non-pharmacological techniques or stress-relievers may
help:
Herbal remedies for sleep and relaxation
More sex
An exercise regimen
A healthier, more consistent diet
Giving up caffeine and other stimulants
Yoga
Meditation or other relaxation strategies
Keeping a journal
Replacing internal negative self-talk
Counseling
Or, look for a support group on the website of the National Alliance on
Mental Illness, www.nami.org. Just remember that these are coping strategies,
not solutions, to anxiety symptoms. On the other hand, these strategies
are all good advice for everyone, anxious or not.
Resources
For more information, see the following:
• www.adaa.org
• www.recovery-inc.org
• The Anxiety Book: Developing Strength in the Face
of Fear by Jonathan Davidson, M.D., and Henry Dreher (Riverhead,
2004) The director of the Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Program at Duke
University takes a dead-center look at anxiety, exploring the neuroscience
of it as well as the psycho/social aspects. It includes self-assessments,
stories from patients, and details on many treatments.
• The Anxiety Myth: Why Your Anxiety May Not be All
in Your Head but from Something Physical, Neurological, Structural, Sensory,
or Environmental (Symmetry, 2006; available online only
at www.anxietymyth.com)
reviews dozens of non-psychological causes of symptoms that can easily
be misinterpreted as signs of anxiety–and suggests what to do if
one of them fits your case.