Panic Attack Medications – Can You Live Without Them?
Medications, a quick fix solution, are the most common way out of panic attacks. They are, for sure, not the
ultimate solution to all behavioral dysfunction and many people have become well without the aid of them.
Nonetheless, panic attack medications are still being prescribed for two reasons—because they work and because they
are convenient.
But can people with panic attacks truly live normally without the medications? For those who believe in their
capacity to help themselves intro treatment other than taking pills and tablets, they can. Sadly for those who are
used to the idea of resorting to meds for cure, it may be a bit hard not to take them.
People who depend too heavily on medication for the alleviation of panic attack symptoms know for a fact that
dependence will ultimately occur. Along with the possibility that they will not get cured of their behavioral
condition, they also will create another problem for themselves—how to recover from dependence on the medication?
This truth is perhaps further exacerbated by the fact that panic attack medications are not the typical over the
counter drugs that one could easily get over with.
Oftentimes, these drugs (e.g. valium and antidepressants) are meant to cure serious cases of mental disorders.
Eventually, the patients will no longer suffer from only one condition but two serious conditions. The bonus? The
addiction adds and aggravates the unpleasant experiences accompanying panic attacks. This is the common experience
of people who rely too much on laboratory-produced substances.
Apart from drug dependence, panic attack medications can also trigger side effects at varying degrees. Typical
examples of side effects are slower reflexes, light headedness, lack of energy, nausea, dizziness, upset stomach,
blurry vision, disorientation, memory loss, confusion, impaired judgment, reduced brain activity, slurred speech
and depression. Beyond the typical side effects, panic attack medications can also pose added risks overtime
especially when certain combinations of medications are used.
Another problem that may be experienced are the paradoxical effects they could elicit. Paradoxical effects
include those conditions that are excited by the use of specific medications which include irritability and anxiety
at the less serious levels, and mania, aggression and hallucination at the more advanced stages.
Further, panic attack medications come with hefty price tags—not really the best way of exacerbating your
already serious behavioral disorder.
However, despite all the negativities surrounding panic attack medications, their effects should not be counted
as entirely useless or dangerous. They were made to provide symptom relief and possible cure to start with. Thus,
not all effects are bad. Nonetheless, it must be remembered that relief from the symptoms should not be entirely
dependent on their effects. They must only be used when extremely necessary. Otherwise, these medications, which
are by nature foreign chemicals, might destroy something in you that is beyond repairable.
The truth is, there are a number of ways to cure yourself from panic attacks apart from depending on medications
to give you the solution. Behavioral therapies as well as cognitive approaches are among the best alternatives to
drugs. Group and individual therapies are also good options. But despite all the promises of these therapies and
treatments, if the person lacks the determination to take himself out of the grip of panic attacks, all these may
prove useless.
Over the years, medical professionals and patients alike proved that only the person, the patient of panic
attacks, could find the cure for his condition.
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