Sleep anxiety: Symptoms of the condition and how to manage it

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GAD, or Generalised Anxiety Disorder, is a term used to describe an umbrella of conditions centred around the feeling of being anxious. A person may have GAD or they may have a specific anxiety disorder with its own severity. Examples include health anxiety, gym anxiety and workplace anxiety. Sleep anxiety, just like other forms of anxiety disorder, comes with its own set of symptoms.

Most health professionals say a person needs at least seven or eight hours of sleep a night.

This form of anxiety, as with other forms of the condition, can be difficult to define as it varies from person to person.

In common with other mental health conditions the symptoms of sleep anxiety aren’t just psychological, they can be physical too.

Physical symptoms include:
• Fast heart rate
• Heart palpitations
• Shortness of breath
• Rapid breathing
• Chest pain
• Dizziness
• Sweating
• Nausea
• Shaking.

READ MORE: Pancreatic cancer: ‘A particularly bad odour’ when you go to the loo

The symptoms can occur either before or during the period a person intends to go to sleep.

Overall, the impact of sleep anxiety can be dramatic as it affects how much sleep someone gets.

Sleep is a key part of the body’s function and lack of it can compound some of the issues caused by anxiety such as edginess and nervousness.

As terrifying as sleep anxiety may be, just like health anxiety there are ways to manage it and keep it under control.

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Not only can exercise help with improving sleep and relieving insomnia, so too can changing other lifestyle habits.

Reducing caffeine and alcohol consumption, as well as quitting smoking, traditionally help the body to rest and fall asleep.

However, while these factors are influential, the most influential decision someone can take in anxiety is to talk about it.

In a world full of worry and tragedy it can be very easy to forget that which matters most, those of the self; as a result, it is important to remember the healthiest thing a person can do is talk and be open when all is not as it seems with their mental health.

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