Understanding Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders are mental health conditions defined as extreme unfounded worry, fear, or paranoia that are outside the individual’s control. The blanket of Anxiety disorders covers a wide range of conditions such as general anxiety disorder, PTSD, and panic disorders. In addition, Obsessive-compulsive disorders are also characterized as anxiety disorders. Learn more about the link between OCD and anxiety disorders in the following section.
What is the Connection Between OCD and Anxiety?
OCD and Anxiety are direct correlations in many regards since they share many of the same neuronic pathways. Here are a few of the distinct correlations between the two.
Anxiety Disorders and OCD Share Similar Symptoms
Not all anxiety disorders are OCD but all OCD’s are anxiety disorders. This often can cause a misdiagnosis since many anxiety disorders share many of the same symptoms exhibited by OCD. Symptoms such as accelerated heart rate, high blood pressure, and tremors are just a few of the shared similarities between these symptoms. This is why it’s important to get top-quality assessment and treatment to ensure you’re being treated for the right condition. Our top-notch treatment team utilizes the most state-of-the-art tools to ensure accurate diagnosis and maximize treatment efficacy.
These Disorders Share the Same Neuronic Regions and Frequencies
The same regions of the brain that affect Anxiety and addiction are the same regions that trigger OCD. This is why addictions are also considered a mental health condition due to similar brain region affectations. This means other co-occurring mental health conditions or addiction disorders can exacerbate one another if left untreated. These shared frequencies can mess with your mind and inflict further mental harm without the proper treatment.
Pre Existing Anxiety or Addiction Disorder Can Trigger OCD Impulses
Because of these shared neuronic frequencies, addictive behaviors and pre-existing anxieties often act as a trigger to OCD impulses. Or most dangerously, OCD impulses can trigger repetitive addiction behaviors that can ultimately lead to overdose and death. In other words, OCD can cause a continuous cycle of substance indulgence beyond the user’s control. You can prevent these exacerbating triggers by getting immediate medical help now.
Anxiety Alone Can Cause Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Having elevated anxiety levels or an anxiety disorder increases the likelihood of developing OCD. That’s due to these unfounded anxieties developing coping behaviors that are a mental attempt to appease these underlying anxieties. Unfortunately, these coping mechanisms only exacerbate anxiety, leading to deeper and more irresistible obsessive behaviors. This means also increasing the likelihood of acquiring multiple mental health disorders.
Anxiety Disorders and OCD Similarly Harm Job and Life Responsibilities
Both types of disorders equally impact your daily life in many ways mentally. These worries and obsessive thoughts consume your mind so much that it leaves little room for much else. Therefore, when your mind is preoccupied with compulsory thoughts or anxiety, it leaves work and home responsibilities forgotten, neglected, or both. As a result, this leads to poor job performance and faltering relationships.
Genetic Predisposition
Studies indicate that anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders can be passed down through genetics. This connection between compulsive and anxiety disorders is largely because both operate within the same regions of the brain. This genetic predisposition is dependent upon your family’s mental health history, primarily stemming from the mother and father. Correlatively, speaking to your physician about your family’s mental health history can help aid a proper diagnosis.
Obsessive Compulsive and Anxiety Disorders Possess Similar Repetitive Thought Cycles
Another common theme between Anxiety and Obsessive Disorders is the continuous entrapping loop of negative thought patterns. These respective cycles produce equally repetitive habits that become ingrained into your routines, requiring professional training to break these trends. Thankfully, we have all the quality training you need to overcome these habitual hurdles.