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| Anxiety Disorder In Children, Anxiety Disorder Children, Disorder Children | 
Anxiety disorders in children are very treatable. Unknown to most  Americans, anxiety disorders are extremely high on the list of health  problems in children. Unfortunately, most people do not know what to  look for, so the symptoms go untreated. It has even been suggested that  many adults’ problems had their root in childhood, though left  undiagnosed. These roots then grew, took hold, and often later showed up  in their adult counterparts.  Anxiety is usually described as being a  sense of worry mixed with fear, apprehension, and even distress. These  feelings are perfectly normal in our lives, however, one must be able to  judge when these feelings head toward being too frequent and  overwhelming. Physical symptoms tend to include sweating, Katerine's,  nausea, and headache; whereas the emotional counterparts are  nervousness and fear. In anxiety disorders, these feelings and physical  symptoms are much more severe. This can cause a child’s rational  thinking and decision making to become skewed, for them to view their  own environments differently, as well as making sitting in school and  trying to learn very difficult. Children with severe symptoms often  complain of stomach aches, dizziness, diarrhea, not being able to  breathe, feeling weak. There are many types of anxiety disorders that  can surface in children. General anxiety disorders are characterized by  excessive feelings of apprehension, worry, and fear happening almost  every day for longer than 6 months. The child cannot control these  feelings and is often restless, hyper, irritable, and cannot fall asleep  or stay asleep so is also easily tired out. Children with this type of  general anxiety disorder have problems functioning in their daily lives  and this causes them more feelings of distress and anxiousness. Panic  disorders are not the same as panic attacks. Panic disorders are  actually repeated panic attacks with the addition of worrying about  having other attacks and how it is affecting their behavior.  Many  people with this disorder find it difficult to function normally as they  are constantly on edge worrying about when another panic attack will  happen. Obsessive-compulsive disorders are characterized by recurring  unwanted thoughts and/or repeated behaviors. It is an obsession that has  to be done no matter how hard the child wants to stop doing it.  Obsessive-compulsive  disorder in children often wind up living alone as they cannot stand to have someone else  soil their home, arrange their possessions, or not lock a door or  window. Post traumatic  stress disorder and acute stress disorder can be similar as these  disorders are usually the result of witnessing, experiencing, or  confronting a traumatic event. The only difference is that post traumatic  stress disorders persist longer than one month whereas acute stress  disorder occurs and dissipates in less than a month. Both disorders  cause extreme amounts of distress, sleeplessness, worry, and fear.  Phobias can also cause extreme amounts of stress in children. The main  concern is for parents to be able to distinguish between a normal fear,  such as monsters under the bed, and an irrational fear, such as being  out in public. Once these are distinguished, then the parents can help  the child seek out the appropriate treatment. 



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