Balance Disorders: Dizziness and Vertigo Treatment of Associated Anxiety Presented by: Gina Byrnes, MSW, LCSW, ACT January 30, 2014
Nov 02, 2014
Balance Disorders: Dizziness and Vertigo
Treatment of Associated Anxiety
Presented by:
Gina Byrnes, MSW, LCSW, ACT
January 30, 2014
Anxiety and Dizziness : The Connection
• Chronic Dizziness or Vertigo associated with Vestibular Disorders is often accompanied by secondary psychological problems including:
• Anxiety or fear
• Hyperventilation
• Phobic avoidance of situations or movements associated with dizziness
Anxiety and Dizziness: The Connection• Anxiety: “An emotional state experienced when a person
anticipates threat or is threatened in some way”
• Anxiety is a normal part everyday life -
typically unpleasant, but manageable
it quickly decreases once the fear is faced
• Anxiety becomes problematic when there is a misperception of the danger involved, and the threat is exaggerated
Anxiety and Dizziness: The Connection
Three Components of Anxiety
Physiological – heart racing, shakiness, dizziness
tingling in hands or feet, shakiness
Cognitive – What we tell ourselves, think about and
pay attention to when anxious
Behavioral - What we do or how we respond
Escape/Avoidance & Coping
Anxiety and Dizziness: The Connection
Similar presentation between Anxiety associated with Vestibular Disorders and Panic Disorder
• Certain Situations trigger fear of Panic/Dizziness• Preoccupation with Physiological Symptoms• Catastrophic Thinking • Strategies Intended to Prevent Panic/Dizziness start to
Take Over Daily Life – Avoidance/Escape & Safety Behaviors
Treatment Approach – Cognitive Therapy Addresses the Misperception and Overestimation of Threat
Anxious Thinking Change Normalized ThinkingFocus on Likelihood of Focus on Realistic
Likelihood
Serious Threat/Danger Process of Various Outcomes
Focus on Inability to Cope, Focus on Ability to Cope
Helplessness & Vulnerability & Problem –Solve Challenging
Circumstances
Intense Anxiety
Minimal AnxietyFrom The Anxiety and Worry Workbook: The Cognitive Behavioral Solutin, David A. Clark and Aaron T. Beck
p. 98, 2012, The Guilford Press
Treatment Approach – Cognitive Therapy
• Catch the Anxious Thought
What is the first thing that went through my mind when I started feeling anxious?
What was the situation (Who What When Where)• Identify any possible Thinking Errors
Overestimation – overestimating likelihood of something bad happening
Catastrophizing – Assuming the worst possible outcome
Maladaptive Thinking – Technically correct but
not helpful and add to anxiety
Treatment Approach – Cognitive Therapy
Evaluating the Anxious Thoughts for Accuracy
1.Do I know for certain that (feared outcome) will happen, is happening?
2.Am I 100% sure that ………(I will get dizzy, fall, become incapacitated)?
3.Does (being dizzy) really mean that (I will lose control, be embarrassed)?
4.What evidence do I have that…..(I cannot leave the house, I cannot drive)?From Group Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety: A Transdiagnostic Treatment Manual by Peter J. Norton.
Copyright 2012 by the Guilford Press.
Treatment Approach – Cognitive Therapy
Evaluating the Anxious Thoughts for Accuracy(cont.)
5.Is there another explanation for ………(my discomfort, feeling unsteady) besides………….(a vertigo attack, loss of control, etc.)
6.What are the chances that ……(what I fear) will actually happen/has actually happened?
7.If I did………(have an episode of dizziness) what is the worst that would really happen?
8.If …………….did happen, how bad would it be?
From Group Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety: A Transdiagnostic Treatment Manual by Peter J. Norton.
Copyright 2012 by the Guilford Press.
Treatment Approach – Cognitive Therapy
Developing a more Reasonable Alternative Response
• “I’ve been through vertigo before, I know I can handle it”• “The worst thing that can happen is I will be
uncomfortable and need to make some temporary adjustments”
• “Just because it feels bad, doesn’t always mean it is bad”• “I can handle more than I think I can”• “Even though I’m afraid to drive, my doctor says I can”
Treatment Approach – Behavioral Therapy
Planning to Face the Fear- Exposure Therapy
• Addresses the Avoidance/Escape Behavior that increase anxiety
• Practice both in session and out – activities one associates with dizziness or even bring on dizziness symptoms
• Develop greater tolerance and/or symptoms diminish as anxiety diminishes
REFERENCES• Abramowitz, J.S.; Deacon, B.J. , Whiteside, S.P.H.; (2011) Exposure Therapy for Anxiety, Guilford
Press.• Clark, D.A., Beck, A.T.; (2012) The Anxiety and Worry Workbook: The Cognitive Behavioral
Solution; Guilford Press. • Norton, P.J., (2012) ; Group Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: A Transdiagnostic Approach; Guilford
Press.• Holmberg, J.; Karlberg, M.; Harlacher, U.; Rivano-Fischer, M. Magnusson, M.; Treatment of Phobic
Postural Vertigo: A Controlled Study of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and self-controlled Desensitization. Journal of Neurology, 2006; 253: 500-506.
• Holmberg, J.; Karlberg M.; Harlacher U.; Magnusson M; One Year Follow-up of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Phobic Postural Vertigo. Journal of Neurology, 2007; 254: 1189-1192
• Johansson, M. Akerlund, D.; Larsen, H.C.; Andersson, G., Randomized Controlled Trial of Vestibular Rehabilitation Combined with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Dizziness in Older People. American Journal of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, 2001; 125: 151-156
• Mahoney, A.E.J.; Edelman, S.; Cremer, P.D.; Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Chronic Subjective Dizziness: Longer Term Gains and Predictors of Disability; 2013, American Journal of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, 2013; 34: 115-126.
• Yardley, L.; Redfern, M.S.; Psychological Factors Influencing Recovery from Balance Disorders; Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 2001; 15: 107-119.