A racing heart, shortness of breath, and dizziness. A sudden surge of intense fear that produces these physical symptoms is called an anxiety attack. The situations, thoughts, or substances that set off this response are called anxiety triggers. Learning your triggers is the basis of effective treatment, and with the right support, anxiety is highly manageable.
What Is an Anxiety Attack?
Anxiety attacks build gradually in response to a perceived threat. Peaking sharply within minutes, panic attacks can arise without warning. In both cases the brain’s fear circuitry fires when it doesn’t need to. Emotion dysregulation makes you feel overwhelmed by feelings you cannot control [1].
The most common physical symptoms include:
- Rapid heartbeat or pounding chest
- Shortness of breath or chest tightness
- Sweating, trembling, or dizziness
- Nausea or stomach upset
- Feelings of dread, unreality, or losing control
What’s the Difference Between An Anxiety Attack and a Panic Attack?
Anxiety attacks build gradually. They are in response to a specific stressor. Panic attacks can strike without a clear trigger and reach peak intensity within about 10 minutes. Both respond well to therapy and, when needed, medication.
Common Anxiety Triggers
With biological, psychological, and environmental roots, anxiety triggers are often layered. Studies of anxiety symptoms show that stress and worry amplify distress across a spectrum of anxiety and depression [2].
Life Stress and Major Life Changes
The most common triggers are work pressure, financial strain, relationship conflict, and caregiving demands. The body’s stress-response system is repeatedly activated, leading to elevated levels of cortisol and adrenaline. With your nervous system on constant high alert, you begin to interpret ordinary situations as dangerous.
Trauma and Adverse Childhood Experiences
Early trauma, abuse, and neglect are all significant risk factors for adult anxiety disorders. Adverse childhood experiences also heighten physiological reactivity. For those people who later develop substance use disorders, this worsens withdrawal symptoms [3]. It also explains how unresolved trauma can drive both anxiety and substance use at the same time.
Medical, Physical, and Environmental Triggers
Thyroid problems, cardiac arrhythmias, chronic pain, and poor sleep can mimic or worsen anxiety. Social anxiety disorder may be triggered by public speaking, crowded places, and conflict. In people with PTSD, sensory cues tied to past trauma can trigger sudden anxiety episodes.
How Substance Use Makes Anxiety Worse
Many people use alcohol or cannabis to relieve anxiety. Although such substances may provide brief relief, the effect is the opposite in the long term. The brain chemistry that regulates fear and mood is disrupted by substance use, which creates a cycle, making it harder to manage anxiety without them.
Is it Possible to Have Both an Anxiety Disorder and a Substance Use Disorder?
Yes, and it is very common. These co-occurring conditions reinforce each other. The best practice is to address both at the same time. This produces better outcomes than treating either condition alone.
- Alcohol: Alcohol temporarily dulls anxiety. But as blood alcohol drops, rebound anxiety occurs. Regular drinking depletes the neurotransmitters that naturally calm the brain (GABA receptors). Negative feelings, such as anxiety and tension, are fueled by repeated cycles of alcohol use. As a result, drinking to feel better leaves you feeling worse when sober [4]. This cycle amplifies distress over time [5].
- Cannabis: At low doses, THC can relieve anxiety but, at higher doses, it can produce or worsen it. People who use cannabis to manage pain-related anxiety show patterns of escalating use that increase overall anxiety load over time [6]. And high-potency products carry a greater risk of triggering acute anxiety episodes.
- Stimulants, Nicotine, and Other Substances: Cocaine, methamphetamine, and high-dose caffeine directly activate the stress response and can induce anxiety attacks. Nicotine feels calming at first, but chronic exposure rewires stress circuits, leading to increased anxiety during withdrawal [7]. Stress and alcohol together alter the brain networks that process emotion, raising vulnerability to both anxiety disorders and alcohol use disorder at the same time [8].
| Substance | Short-Term Effect on Anxiety | Long-Term or Withdrawal Effect |
| Alcohol | Reduces anxiety briefly | Rebound anxiety depletes calming GABA activity |
| Cannabis (THC) | May calm at low doses; can trigger anxiety at high doses | Escalating use; increased anxiety load over time |
| Nicotine | Feels calming in the moment | Rewires stress circuits; anxiety spikes in withdrawal |
| Stimulants | Directly activates stress response; can cause attacks | Persistent anxiety and mood instability after use |
Treatment for Anxiety and Co-Occurring Substance Use
Anxiety disorders are among the most treatable mental health conditions. When substance use is also present, integrated treatment addressing both conditions simultaneously produces the best outcomes. SSRIs, SNRIs, and certain anticonvulsants show strong efficacy for anxiety. Combining medication with psychotherapy is recommended. [9].
Effective treatment approaches include:
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Identifies distorted thought patterns that fuel anxiety, combined with gradual exposure to feared situations.
- Medication: SSRIs and SNRIs; benzodiazepines are used short-term due to risk of dependence.
- Trauma-focused therapy: EMDR and trauma-focused CBT work through the adverse experiences underlying many anxiety disorders.
- Integrated dual-diagnosis programs: Various levels of care that treat anxiety and substance use together.
- Lifestyle changes: Regular exercise, consistent sleep, and mindfulness practices lower anxiety levels.
Alcohol Addiction Treatment with Locations Across Nevada, Arizona, Texas, and Oregon. Find A Center Near You
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