Posted by info in Anxiety, CBT, Treatment, meditation Monday, 11 January o 21:20 No Comments
I saw an interesting blog post several days ago on the site of the Huffington Post about the potential benefits of meditation – or at least about what one woman thinks might be the benefits.
Priscilla Warner writes about the contrast between Tibetan monks’ apparent calm, evident even on brain scans, and her own anxiety disorder.
Ms. Warner says that she suffers from panic disorder, a severe form of anxiety in which a person can have multiple anxiety attacks every day, even in the middle of the night. Her post is titled “I Want the Brain of a Monk” Although most people don’t suffer from anxiety this severe, many people have symptoms of anxiety. And research has consistently shown that higher levels of anxiety are related to more memory problems.
What’s the relation to brain fitness? In my brain fitness class, I often mention the usefulness of meditation in helping reduce stress and anxiety, both of which have negative effects on memory. You don’t have to go to Tibet to get the benefits of meditation. If you simply take 10 minutes several times a day to break in to the ongoing rush of getting things done, you’ve made a start. Use those 10 minutes to sit quietly, relax your muscles, and breathe deeply.
If you do that every day for two weeks, I think you’ll notice that you feel calmer and better able to focus. And if you’re better able to focus, you will be better able to pay attention and remember things.
Posted by info in Treatment Monday, 11 January o 21:07 No Comments
An article in this month’s Archives of General Psychiatry presents a study that looks at the relation of depression to generalized anxiety disorder (GAD).
The relation of anxiety to depression is complex at least in part because of the way the two conditions overlap. Most people with depression have at least some symptoms of anxiety, and many people with anxiety have significant symptoms of depression.
The study reported in the Archives shows that patterns of GAD over time are similar to those of other anxiety disorders, such as social phobia and panic disorder. At the same time, the course of depression was different from the anxiety disorders.
This study shows again that in spite of similarities, GAD and other anxiety disorders are in many ways distinct from mood disorders. In spite of the overlap in symptoms (and often, treatments), GAD may be separate from depression.
Reference:
Beesdo K, et al. (2010). Incidence and risk patterns of anxiety and depressive disorders and categorization of generalized anxiety disorder. Archives of General Psychiatry, 67, 47-57.