Anxiety-Related Disorders
Key Points
- Anxiety disorders involve persistent, excessive fear/worry that disrupts daily functioning.
- Major subtypes include generalized anxiety disorder, phobias, and panic disorder.
- Effective care combines psychoeducation, psychotherapy, and selective pharmacologic support.
- Nursing priorities include risk assessment, panic de-escalation, and coping-skill reinforcement.
Pathophysiology
Anxiety disorders reflect dysregulated threat detection, autonomic arousal, and maladaptive cognitive processing. Genetic predisposition, stress/trauma exposure, and learned avoidance patterns all contribute to symptom persistence.
Avoidance temporarily lowers distress but reinforces long-term anxiety severity.
Classification
- GAD: Chronic, excessive worry across multiple domains for prolonged periods.
- Phobia disorders: Excessive fear tied to specific objects/situations or social/performance settings.
- Panic disorder: Recurrent panic attacks with anticipatory fear and behavioral avoidance.
Nursing Assessment
NCLEX Focus
Distinguish panic attack from medical emergencies while treating both as urgent until ruled out.
- Assess symptom duration, triggers, and functional impairment.
- Assess panic physiology (palpitations, dyspnea, chest discomfort, derealization).
- Assess avoidance behaviors and safety impact on work/school/social life.
- Assess comorbid depression, substance use, and sleep disturbance.
- Assess treatment readiness and prior response to therapy/medication.
Nursing Interventions
- Use calm, brief communication and breathing coaching during panic episodes.
- Guide gradual exposure and coping rehearsal for phobic avoidance reduction.
- Teach anxiety-management skills (grounding, relaxation, cognitive reframing).
- Support adherence to psychotherapy (CBT/ERP/exposure approaches).
- Monitor medication use and reinforce safe short-term versus long-term strategies.
Avoidance Reinforcement Loop
Repeated avoidance strengthens fear conditioning and worsens long-term disability.
Pharmacology
Common options include SSRIs/SNRIs and buspirone for long-term management, with cautious short-term benzodiazepine use when indicated. Nurses should monitor sedation, dependence risk, and medication-response timelines.
Clinical Judgment Application
Clinical Scenario
A client with recurrent sudden dyspnea, chest tightness, and fear of dying avoids public transport after two episodes.
Recognize Cues: Panic-pattern symptoms with escalating avoidance behavior. Analyze Cues: Functional impairment now extends beyond isolated episodes. Prioritize Hypotheses: Priority is panic disorder stabilization and avoidance-cycle interruption. Generate Solutions: Initiate panic education, exposure-based plan, and medication review. Take Action: Implement coping protocol and coordinate psychotherapy referral. Evaluate Outcomes: Track attack frequency, avoidance reduction, and daily-function recovery.
Related Concepts
- stress-and-anxiety - Provides foundational stress/anxiety physiology and coping framework.
- obsessive-compulsive-and-related-disorders - Distinguishes anxiety spectrum from OCD-related patterns.
- trauma-induced-and-stress-related-disorders - Supports differential diagnosis with trauma-driven symptoms.
- self-harm-and-suicide - Addresses risk when severe anxiety coexists with hopelessness.
- psychopharmacology - Expands medication safety and class-level considerations.