Anti-Anxiety Drugs: Tranquilizers For Short-Term Use Only

Although many people turn to anti-anxiety drugs to get relief from panic attacks, this medication treats the symptoms not the health condition. This means that you’ll feel better but you won’t be cured and safe from other anxiety episodes in the future. Doctors do recommend drugs but only for short-term administration and usually in parallel with some form of therapy meant to address and solve the real causes of anxiety. There are serious health concerns related to anti-anxiety drugs because when used extensively they can cause addiction and lots of side effects. Lifestyle changes and therapy should be the more valuable alternatives to medication when it comes to treating anxiety.

Traditional anti-anxiety drugs include medication such as benzodiazepines that are normally prescribed for the treatment of all anxiety disorders. Other, newer variants, include beta blockers and antidepressants. Despite the scientific progress, these more modern medicines still can’t solve the real cause of anxiety, and once the treatment is over, symptoms can return. Experts all over the world agree that anti-anxiety drugs are just a temporary solution, and they are part of a more complex treatment process. Therefore, patients have to be informed about what other options they’ve got to improve health permanently.

Another name for anti-anxiety drugs is tranquilizers because of the impact they have on the central nervous system (they create a more tranquil state of mind). Tranquilizers relax muscles, calm the nerves and allow one to continue regular activities, or get a good nights rest. The reaction to the medication is very fast: results will appear in less than an hour, plus, when administered during a panic attack, the efficiency is incredible. However, there is a big downside to anti-anxiety drugs: side effects. First and foremost, they cause physical addiction. Even if you want to stop the treatment, you’ll find it very difficult because of the craving for the substances.

Sleepiness or poor coordination are other adverse reactions related to the use of anti-anxiety drugs, benzodiazepines in particular. This means that you won’t be able to drive or carry on with some regular activities: some drugs leave you with a hangover feeling. The problem results from the slow metabolism of the anti-anxiety drugs that accumulate in the system, causing over sedation. What you’ll actually feel is like being drunk; therefore, caution and short term administration are considered best.

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