1. Increased likelihood to self medicate if not properly diagnosed or understood
2. Low self esteem from feeling 'different' from others
3. Avoidance behaviors of panic triggering situation, making everyday tasks difficult to impossible for the sufferer.
PANIC DISORDER is just a way of lableing someone who has anxiety attacks.A PANIC ATTACK is just a more intense form of an anxiety attack. Avoiding these situations is the best way to eliminate these feelings.
The adjective form of the noun panic is panicky.
The plural form of panic is panics.
The correct past tense form of panic is panicked.
Okay there can be two answers for this question. Yes and no. The reason being is because everybody is different, and everybody is put through different situations. Depending on how well you can handle a certain situation depends on how well your body can avoid having a panic attack. Basically, everybody has a panic attack maybe only once in their lifetime or more but remember that depending on the situation, it all has to do with how they deal with it. :D
It may be a mild form of epilepsy triggered off by that form of stimulation, perhaps combined with flickering from either a monitor or obstacles interrupting the light. There is also something else connected to this phenomenon. People who have panic attacks sometimes find that moving their eyes rapidly back and forth calms them. Maybe this is the reverse effect.
The plural form of the noun behavior is behaviors.
Technically, there isn't an adverb form of "panic". You could use "panically", but it's nonstandard.
No, the word 'attacks' is the plural form of the noun 'attack'.The singular possessive form is attack's.Examples:The attack's ferocity was overblown by the prosecutor. (singular possessive)The town had sustained several attacks from artillery. (plural)
Gum cancer. AJ
Yes.
In his first form, he has Laser Beams. In his second form, he has five special attacks, one of which is Insanity Prelude. Many of the other attacks are not named.