What is Anxiety Nausea
You might feel just a little queasy at a moment of heightened anxiety. Before making a public presentation or going on a work interview, you might have the sensation of “butterflies in your stomach.” In short order, this kind of nausea can pass. Yet anxiety-related nausea will also make you completely sick to the stomach. In this article, we will give you brief information about Anxiety Nausea and talk about its prevalence.
When doctors can’t find any symptoms in the analysis, they usually predict that the nausea is developed for psychological reasons.
Is anxiety nausea common?
Anxiety nausea is one of the most common symptoms of an anxiety disorder. Other symptoms include panic attacks, trouble concentrating, loss of appetite or increase in appetite, sleep problems, chest pain or feeling numb inside, and many more.
Nausea may become chronic. It happens suddenly, can last for days. This can be related to psychological reasons. We call this anxiety nausea. The patient hurts himself/herself. Anxiety patients are so nervous, concerned, and fearful that their feelings cause anxiety nausea.
Anxiety disorder occurs in teenagers and adults. It’s one of the biggest mental disorders and it affects life quality negatively.
Anxiety patients usually feel depressed. That causes serious problems.
Most patients accept the disease and try to live with it, but this only makes things worse. These patients must get psychiatric help; otherwise, nausea will go even further.
This disorder is more likely to emerge after serious events such as traumas and genetic, brain chemistry, personality.
In addition to nausea, anxiety also causes sweating, shivering, dry mouth, hot flush, tinnitus(ringing in the ears), headache, insomnia.
If the patient faces their fear, they can take control. But the patient gets scared and they often avoid the problem instead of facing it. If the patient avoids the problem, things can worsen and the disease may develop in different ways.
There are different types of anxiety. The most common are:
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder)
Last Updated on December 15, 2023 by Lucas Berg