Dissociation

Dissociation is a defensive reaction to trauma or stress where your sense of identity, memory, or consciousness is altered. The most common forms of dissociation are:

  • Depersonalization: a sense of detachment or disconnection from yourself
  • Derealization: a sense of disconnection from your surroundings or reality

Although these symptoms may indicate a dissociative disorder, they can also be influencedTrusted Source by anxiety or stress as part of your fight, flight, or freeze response.

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Persistent hiccups

Hiccups, or involuntary spasms of the diaphragm, are usually understood as a digestive symptom. But they can also be caused or intensifiedTrusted Source by mental or emotional stress.

According to a small case studyTrusted Source, children and adolescents could also develop hiccups as a symptom of psychological distress.

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Hives and skin rashes

PsychodermatologyTrusted Source focuses on the interaction between your mind and skin. ResearchTrusted Source in this field shows a link between anxiety disorders and skin symptoms like chronic itching and hives. This might create another cycleTrusted Source in which stress and anxiety worsen itching, and vice versa.

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Tinnitus, or ringing ears

Tinnitus is the medical term for a ringing or buzzing noise in the ears, although it can also cause a roaring or whistling sound.

ResearchTrusted Source suggests that people with chronic tinnitus are also more likely to report anxiety.

The sounds of tinnitus may also be perceivedTrusted Source as being louder by people with anxiety. This can lead to a vicious cycle where tinnitus causes anxiety, and that anxiety increases your awareness of the tinnitus.

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Unusual anxiety symptoms

Not all anxiety symptoms are well known. If you live with anxiety, you might experience one of these physical symptoms and not realize it’s rooted in anxiety.

Chest pain

A racing heart is a familiar symptom of anxiety, but chronic anxiety can also cause chest pain or the sensation of a heart “flutter.”

An increased heart rate and muscle tension are both part of your body’s fight, flight, or freeze response, but they can cause pain if anxiety is chronic.

This symptom can be especially distressing because it can mimic the onset of a heart attack, often causing even more anxiety. Researchers estimate that almost 50% of people who come to the ER with low-risk chest pain (that is, pain not related to a heart attack) experienced higher than usual levels of anxiety.

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9 Unusual Anxiety Symptoms You Might Not Know About Unusual symptoms Typical symptoms When to see a doctor Recap Ringing ears and chest pain might not be the first things that come to mind when you picture anxiety, but there is a connection.

Anxiety can show up in lots of different ways and rarely looks the same from person to person. Trying to figure out if anxiety is causing your symptoms isn’t always a straightforward process.

While anxiety disorders are some of the most commonly diagnosedTrusted Source mental health conditions in the United States, they’re not always easy to spot.

If you have an anxiety disorder and you’re experiencing a strange symptom — especially one your doctor can’t explain — you might feel relieved to know that your anxiety could be causing it.

Whether it’s a somatic symptom or an emotion that doesn’t seem connected to anxiety at first, tying these mysterious symptoms to a known cause could help you manage them.

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Transient epileptic amnesia

A distinctive epileptic syndrome typically occurs in late middle age, transient epileptic amnesia is often mistaken for dementia, cerebrovascular disease, or transient global amnesia. The condition is marked by amnestic seizures³ that typically last 15-30 minutes and occur approximately once per month.

While some people only experience amnesia, other manifestations in addition to amnesia include olfactory hallucinations, brief loss of awareness, automatisms (for example, lip-smacking), and, very rarely, tonic-clonic seizures.

The condition has been linked to a group of persistent interictal (between seizures) memory complaints. These include accelerated long-term forgetting, autobiographical amnesia (inability to recall personal memories), and topographical amnesia (difficulty recognizing familiar locations). Antiepileptic treatment⁴ has been shown to control both seizures and interictal memory disturbances.

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Why does the location of the seizure matter?

Seizures can either be generalized (affecting both sides of the brain) or focal (located or beginning in one small part of the brain). Because seizures can affect different parts and functions of the brain, they don’t all appear the same or have the same long-term consequences.

Take, for example, the hippocampus. This part of the brain is a bit like a highly efficient receptionist. It receives new information, and if it seems valuable, it sends it off to the relevant area of the brain for long-term storage.

When you need that information again, the hippocampus goes to fetch it for you. Seizures that affect this part of the brain can make it more difficult for you to store and retrieve information, even if the areas of the brain that usually store the information are unaffected.

Certain areas of the brain, namely Broca’s area, and Wernicke’s area, are responsible for speech and language. If seizures originate in or affect these areas of your brain, you may have difficulty accessing or understanding certain words.

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Los Angeles Sheriff Blows Whistle: Govt Is Using Vax Mandates As A Way To Defund The Police

Sheriff Alex Villanueva of Los Angeles County warned on Thursday that the authoritarians are exploiting COVID-19 rules as a means to secretly defund the police.

“[The Board of Supervisors’] incompetence is only outweighed by their hypocrisy!” “#FactsMatter,” Villaneuva tweeted on Thursday, with a photo of a firefighter’s suspension notice.

For refusing to comply with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s COVID mandate, the L.A. County fireman risks a five-day penalty.

“Due to the Department’s current staffing crisis, which is the result of the current COVID-19,” the letter adds, “your five (5) day suspension without pay will be served at a later date.”

Justthenews.com reports:The supervisors “need to actually follow their own advice,” Villanueva told the “Just the News” show on Thursday. “They keep saying that law enforcement has to deescalate and defuse tensions, and they did the exact opposite. They went and escalated it. They manufactured a crisis when there was none” by forcing sheriff’s deputies to get fired or vaccinated.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted last week to take the COVID mandate enforcement responsibilities away from Sheriff Villanueva, the Los Angeles Times reported. The sheriff has said since October that he would not enforce the county’s vaccine mandate.

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