Children and Anxiety Attacks - Anxiety Attacks Are Common in Children
Mild anxiety attacks are often assumed, for up to 10 years is the time one takes actions to it.
At this time anxiety attacks would have reached threat levels and mostly the child would have grown into an adult with the disorder.
Both pharmacologic and psychotherapeutic treatments are available for children, but these methods are never initiated since at first the illness is often ignored, until later stages in life when the patient is grown and in desperate need of medical aid.
However, in children who have received cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety, the support has been experiential.
The effect of cognitive behavioral therapy appears to be relatively well maintained over time.
Anxiety changes as the child grows and when one ages, his or her attacks worsens with time.
Proving that chronic adult anxiety were once mild rarely noticed attacks as a child.
Research point out that children who fear darkness are likely to get anxiety attacks as adults.
With this it was noted that fears shoot from a massive amount of disorders rather than a variation of a single disorder.
As strange as it might seems children with functional constipation have been noted to have anxiety related to toileting than healthy kids.
Painful bowel movements can make a child fearful of pain, and these children dismay sitting on the toilet.
Thus called defecation anxiety.
Some of these children develop generalized anxiety at latter stages in life-the greater the defecation anxiety, the greater the generalized anxiety.