last authored: Sept 2009, Dave LaPierre
Fear is the experienced reaction to accurately perceived danger
Worry is uncontrollable negative thoughts about the past or future
Anxiety is physiological tension and and arousal, leading to cognitive interpretation of threats and avoidance. It can be good in novel situations, heighten awareness, and help prepare for upcoming situations.
Normal fears include loud noises in infancy, strangers and separation in toddlers, monsters in 2-4 years, and bodily injury or danger in 6-10 years.
There is an inverted relationship between arousal and performance, however, and too much anxiety, for too long, can have significant negative effects. Excess energy leads to signs and symptoms of anxiety including:
Physical symptoms: generally sympathetic: tachcardia, tachypnea, diaphoresis, faintness
Affect: range from mild edginess to terror and panic
Behaviour: avoidance, compulsions
Cognitions: worry, apprehension, obsession, thoughts of emotional or physical harm
These also give rise to anxiety as an excess of energy swirling around (mine in my stomach). If my stomach neurons are swirling, what's happening to my brain?
An too much anxiety, improperly addressed, can lead to conditions such as:
Alarm - locus coeruleus - central NA mechanism
Limbic System (ie amygdala) - scans the environment, monitors internal sensations, integrates cognitive and memory inputs and determines emotional valence
Basal ganglia and thalamus --cortical circuits - increased activity in caudate and orbital frontal cortex in OCD
stress response - HPA axis - increased cortisol release
hypothalamus releases CRH to anterior pituitary, which releases ACTH to adrenal cortex, releasing cortisol.
cortex - interprets internal state
Excitatory: NE, CRH
Inhibitory: 5-HT, GABA
the short route:
emotional stimulus is processed by sensory thalamus, which activates the amygdala and induces an emotional response
Fear can be influenced by the amygdala, in the limbic system.
long route:
sensory thalamus signals are processed by sensory cortex, and together with hippocampal accessing of memories the amygdala is activated
Avoidance is likely the most common response to anxiety, either behaviourally or psychially. While this can be helpful at times, avoidance can actually make aniety worse the next time the stimulus arrives.
behavioural inhibition (Kagan et al, 1988)
emotional intensity - high negative EI (anger, fear, sadness) correlates with anxiety disorders (Eisenberg, 1995)
emerging evidence suggests genes are turned on/off with attachment
verbal and nonverbal communication
infants and children take cues from parent's faces, involving limbic and cortical pathways
"Kids very seldom listen to what you say, but the watch very carefully what you do" Morgan Freeman
parenting style...
Parental Anxiety
...
Genetic/constitutional vulnerability shaped by developmental experience, influenced by environment, and maintained by maladaptive cognitions and behaviours including avoidance responses.
always do the workup first