Author Archives: Ryan Bradley Coleman

Anxiety and Phobias

Anxiety is a common disorder within humans. For the most part almost everyone experiences anxiety during their lives, for example before a speech or large sporting event. However, when does normal anxiety cross over to abnormal anxiety. The three D’s, deviant, distressful, and dysfunctional are used to classify anxiety disorders.

My cousin can be classified with a anxiety disorder. He is deviant as he does not like social interaction and will go to measures to stay away from people, he also has a constant supply of hand sanitizer o him at all times and uses it whenever shaking hands touching door knob etc. This can lead to distress as he can not control himself in these situations. Other people also tend to avoid him due to his constant distress.   He can also be considered dysfunctional due to his constant hand washing and fear of germs. He cannot go through a day or a class without thinking about germs and thinking about washing his hands.  This can be hard for not only himself but his family and all of us as well.

The eye taken for granted

In 4th grade I had a somewhat traumatic experience. I remember it like it was yesterday ( A true memory not just a memory of the retold story). I was doing my homework up in my room and pencil in hand I tried to get my bean bag chair that was wedged tightly in between the wall and the bookcase. As I was pulling my hands slipped and the point of my pencil which I was holding at the time poked me in my eye. I remember a very sharp pain in my eye and had to keep it closed for about ten minutes. During those ten minutes I felt almost helpless, my field of vision was decreased by a lot, and I had dots in my other eye. At first I thought I was going to be blind in that eye but eventually I was able to open it and my vision was revived. However, the carbon n the pencil embedded in my eye and now I have a permanent reminder of how close I really was to not being able to use that eye. If the pencil had hit just a half cm higher it would have hit my pupil and I would have lost vision in that eye. This relates to this class because many people take vision for granted. The eye is a remarkable and complicated part of the body that we use almost every second of our lives.

Alcohol plus anti-anxiety medication effects on brain

GABA is a common acid found in the brain and is the main inhibitor of neurons in the brain. It is responsible for stopping cells from continuously firing. This is important for humans and mammals and low amounts of GABA have been known to be a factor for seizures. When ingesting alcohol, ethanol is absorbed into the bloodstream and eventually the brain. Ethanol when in the brain causes GABA receptors to open ion channels and therefore GABA effects are multiplied. With GABA effects increasing more cells begin to stop firing or firing less. This is why motor function and speech is impaired when alcohol is consumed. Adderall or other anti-anxiety medications are taken sometimes by people before parties or while drinking alcohol. Adderall has the opposite effect on the brain compared to alcohol, stimulating the senses, feeling more alert, etc. When both Adderall and alcohol are taken together it can be dangerous for the consumer. The consumer even if drinking heavily will not feel the drunkenness as much which can cause the consumer to drink even more alcohol. This can result in a massive amount of alcohol intake, alcohol poisoning, and possible death.

This relates to my life, while at the beach, with my friends, and drinking, one of my friends decided to take Adderall, however no one knew that he had took it. Throughout the day, he began drinking heavily and being a heavy drinker we did not really take notice. In the afternoon, he passed out on his bed and we left him to sleep it off for a little. When he awoke he began drinking again and unsurprisingly soon passed out again. We became somewhat worried but not enough to stop partying or wake him up. The next day when we all awoke he was still sleeping. Being somewhat late in the day we decided to wake him up. He woke up but was not acting himself at all, he constantly kept thinking he saw our landlord outside the house, but when we investigated, no one was there. He also kept thinking he was urinating himself when in reality he wasn’t. At this point we were pretty concerned for his well being and gave his parents a call. They came down, picked him up, and drove him to a hospital. He had to stay in the hospital for a couple days due to severe alcohol poisoning. Although he eventually recovered, it was a scary experience for not only him but all of us as well. It is important to understand that taking anti-anxiety medicine while drinking can have some very dangerous effects and one should always be mindful of how many drinks are consumed.

Source:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC165791/