Dictionary Definition
anxiety
Noun
1 a relatively permanent state of anxiety
occurring in a variety of mental disorders [syn: anxiousness]
2 a vague unpleasant emotion that is experienced
in anticipation of some (usually ill-defined) misfortune
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From anxietatem, from anxius.Pronunciation
- /æŋzˈaɪəti/
Noun
- A state of mental uneasiness or concern about some uncertain event.
- An uneasy or distressing desire (for something).
- I was anxious to get into the office before Henderson called from New York.
- In the context of "pathology": A state of restlessness and agitation, often accompanied by a distressing sense of oppression or tightness in the stomach.
Translations
concern
- Czech: úzkost
- Dutch: bezorgdheid
- Estonian: rahutus, ängistus
- Finnish: huoli, ahdistus, huolestuneisuus, levottomuus
- German: Besorgnis
- Irish: imní
- Italian: ansia , ansietà
- Japanese: 心配 (shinpai)
- Old English: cearu
- Portuguese: angústia, ansiedade
- Spanish: zozobra
- Swedish: ängslan , farhåga
eager desire
Synonyms
care; solicitude; foreboding; uneasiness; perplexity; disquietude; disquiet; trouble; apprehension; restlessness; distress.Extensive Definition
- This article is about state anxiety. For information on susceptibility to anxiety, see trait anxiety.
Anxiety is a physiological state characterized by
cognitive, somatic, emotional, and behavioral components. These
components combine to create the feelings that we typically
recognize as anger and known as fear, apprehension,
or worry. Anxiety is often
accompanied by physical sensations such as heart
palpitations, nausea,
chest
pain, shortness
of breath, stomach
aches, or headache.
The cognitive component entails expectation of a diffuse and
certain danger. Somatically the body prepares the organism to deal
with threat (known as an emergency reaction): blood
pressure and heart rate are
increased, sweating is increased, bloodflow to the major muscle
groups is increased, and immune and
digestive
system functions are inhibited (the 'fight or flight' response).
Externally, somatic signs of anxiety may include pale skin,
sweating, trembling, and pupillary dilation.
Emotionally, anxiety causes a sense of dread or panic and
physically causes nausea, diarrhoea, and chills. Behaviorally, both
voluntary and involuntary behaviors may arise directed at escaping
or avoiding the source of anxiety and often maladaptive, being most
extreme in anxiety
disorders. However, anxiety is not always pathological or
maladaptive: it is a common emotion along with fear, anger,
sadness, and happiness, and it has a very important function in
relation to survival.
Neural circuitry involving the amygdala and hippocampus is thought to
underlie anxiety. When confronted with unpleasant and potentially
harmful stimuli such as foul odors or tastes,
PET-scans show increased bloodflow in the amygdala. In these studies, the
participants also reported moderate anxiety. This might indicate
that anxiety is a protective mechanism designed to prevent the
organism from engaging in potentially harmful behaviors.
Symptoms
Although anxiety attacks are not experienced by every anxiety sufferer, they are a common symptom. Anxiety attacks usually come without warning, and although the fear is generally irrational, the perceived danger is very real. A person experiencing an anxiety attack will often feel as if they are about to die or pass out.Emotional symptoms of anxiety include a fear
(such as a fear of an illness), they may feel the need to avoid
certain stressful situations or social situations due to fear of
embarrassment. There may be considerable confusion and irritability
when the anxiety is taking place. Physical symptoms include
hot
flushes, chest pain,
sudden tiredness,
headaches,
shortness of breath,
problems digesting and nausea.
Theories
Two factor theory of anxiety
Sigmund Freud recognized anxiety as a "signal of danger" and a cause of "defensive behavior". He believed we acquire anxious feelings through classical conditioning and traumatic experiences.People maintain anxiety through operant
conditioning; when people see or encounter something associated
with a previous traumatic experience, anxious feelings resurface.
People feel temporarily relieved when we avoid/remove ourselves
from situations which make us anxious/fearful, known as
negative-reinforcement, but this only increases anxious feelings
the next time we are in the same position, and we will want to
escape the situation again and therefore will not make any progress
against the anxiety, only intensifying the emotions or fear.
Phobias can be developed this way, as well as cured using the
opposite positive-reinforcement whereby instead of removal from the
anxiety causing situation (which acts as a 'reward'
(negative-reinforcement)) something positive can be added to the
situation instead to act as a reward, like actually facing the fear
and coming away from it safely. This is known as positive
reinforcement of a negative situation.
Types of anxiety
Existential anxiety
-
- See more under existential crisis.
Theologians like Paul Tillich
and psychologists like Sigmund
Freud have characterized anxiety as the reaction to what
Tillich called, "The trauma of nonbeing." That is, the human comes
to realize that there is a point at which he or she might cease to
be (die), and their encounter with reality becomes characterized by
anxiety. Religion,
according to both Tillich and Freud, then becomes a carefully
crafted coping mechanism in response to this anxiety since they
redefine death as the end of only the corporal part of human
personal existence, assuming an immortal soul. What then becomes of this
soul and through what criteria is the cardinal difference of
various religious
faiths.
Philosophical ruminations are a part of this
condition, and this is part of
obsessive-compulsive disorder. They are typically about sex and
religion or death. However, truly rational philosophical thinking
is usually driven by a desire for a rational understanding of
reality, rather than a desire to avoid death.
According to Viktor
Frankl, author of Man's
Search for Meaning, when faced with extreme mortal dangers the
very basic of all human wishes is to find a meaning of
life to combat this "trauma of nonbeing" as death is near and
to succumb to it (even by suicide) seems like a way
out.
The "father" of existentialism, Søren
Kierkegaard, regarded all humans to be born into despair by
default (in The
Sickness Unto Death). Such despair was created by having a
false conception of the self. He regarded the mortal self which can
exist relatively, and therefore be born or die, as the false self.
The true self was the relationship of self to God, rather than to
any relative object.
Test anxiety
Test anxiety is the uneasiness, apprehension, or nervousness felt by students who have a fear of failing an exam. Students suffering from test anxiety may experience any of the following: the association of grades with personal worth, fear of embarrassment by a teacher, fear of alienation from parents or friends, time pressures, or feeling a loss of control. Emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and physical components can all be present in test anxiety. Sweating, dizziness, headaches, racing heartbeats, nausea, fidgeting, and drumming on a desk are all common. An optimal level of arousal is necessary to best complete a task such as an exam; however, when the anxiety or level of arousal exceeds that optimum, it results in a decline in performance. Because test anxiety hinges on fear of negative evaluation, debate exists as to whether test anxiety is itself a unique anxiety disorder or whether it is a specific type of social phobia. In 2006, approximately 49% of high school students were reportedly experiencing this condition.While the term "test anxiety" refers specifically
to students, many adults share the same experience with regard to
their career or profession. The fear of failing a task and being
negatively evaluated for it can have a similarly negative effect on
the adult.
Stranger and social anxiety
Anxiety when meeting or interacting with unknown people is a common stage of development in young people.So-called "stranger anxiety" in younger people is
not a phobia in the classic sense; rather it is a developmentally
appropriate fear by young children of those who do not share a
loved-one, caretaker or parenting role. In adults, an excessive
fear of other people is not a developmentally common stage; it is
called social
anxiety.
Anxiety in palliative care
Some research has strongly suggested that treating anxiety in cancer patients improves their quality of life. The treatment generally consists of counseling, relaxation techniques or pharmacologically with benzodiazepines.Herbal treatments
Marijuana has been used to treat anxiety , although due to its prohibition many countries do not employ its use. Marijuana is also associated with causing anxiety. Kava root is also an effective natural treatment for short-term relief of mild anxiety. Due to recent findings regarding side effects of prolonged used of Kava-Kava, some individuals have turned to other natural herbs such as valerian (herb) root, Chamomile, orange peel and peppermint, for example.See also
References
anxiety in Bosnian: Anksioznost
anxiety in Bulgarian: Тревожност
anxiety in Catalan: Ansietat
anxiety in Czech: Úzkost
anxiety in Danish: Angst
anxiety in German: Angst
anxiety in Spanish: Ansiedad
anxiety in Persian: اضطراب
anxiety in French: Anxiété
anxiety in Croatian: Anksioznost
anxiety in Ido: Anxio
anxiety in Italian: Ansia
anxiety in Lithuanian: Nerimas
anxiety in Dutch: Faalangst
anxiety in Japanese: 不安
anxiety in Norwegian: Angst
anxiety in Polish: Lęk
anxiety in Portuguese: Ansiedade
anxiety in Russian: Тревога
anxiety in Albanian: Frika
anxiety in Sicilian: Ngustia
anxiety in Simple English: Anxiety
anxiety in Slovak: Úzkosť
anxiety in Serbian: Анксиозност
anxiety in Swedish: Ångest
anxiety in Turkish: Anksiyete
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abstraction, abulia, ache, ado, alacrity, alienation, all-overs,
angst, anguish, animation, annoyance, anxiety equivalent,
anxiety state, anxiousness, apathy, appetite, apprehension, apprehensiveness,
avidity, avidness, besetment, boredom, bother, breathless impatience,
can of worms, catatonic stupor, chafing, cheerful readiness,
cheerlessness,
cliff-hanging, compulsion, concern, concernment, dejection, depression, desire, detachment, disadvantage, discomfort, discomposure, discontent, dislike, displeasure, disquiet, disquietude, dissatisfaction,
distress, doubt, dread, dullness, eagerness, elan, elation, emotionalism, emptiness, ennui, euphoria, evil, excitement, existential woe,
expectant waiting, flatness, folie du doute,
foreboding, forwardness, fretfulness, fretting, great ado, grimness, gust, gusto, haste, headache, hypochondria, hysteria, hysterics, impatience, impatientness, impetuousness, inconvenience, indifference, inquietude, insensibility, joylessness, keen desire,
keenness, lack of
pleasure, lather,
lethargy, life, liveliness, longing, malaise, mania, matter, melancholia, mental
distress, misery,
misgiving, mistrust, nausea, nervousness, nongratification,
nonsatisfaction,
obsession, painfulness, panic, pathological
indecisiveness, peck of troubles, pessimism, preoccupation, problem, promptness, psychalgia, psychomotor
disturbance, qualm,
qualmishness,
quickness, readiness, restiveness, restlessness, savorlessness, sea of
troubles, solicitude,
spirit, spleen, staleness, stew, stupor, suffering, suspense, sweat, tastelessness, tediousness, tedium, tense readiness, thirst, tic, trouble, twitching, uncertainty, uncomfortableness,
unease, uneasiness, unhappiness, unpatientness, unpleasure, unquietness, unresponsiveness,
unsatisfaction,
verve, vexation of spirit,
vitality, vivacity, waiting, withdrawal, worry, zest, zestfulness