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  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

Is smoking helpful for anxiety ?

neone

Bluelighter
Joined
May 2, 2015
Messages
72
Specifically social anxiety (that may be caused by adhd) so is smoking normal cigarettes helpful for this ? Since i read nicotine releases endorphines and dopamine in brain.

N.B please i dont want to hear smoking is bad or dont smoke cause of its side effects. All i want to know is if it helps with social anxiety and adhd
 
Don't suffer from ADHD, but suffered from social anxiety and found the distraction of smoking to be helpful. You see, I had a reason for standing there all entranced in my thoughts and it gave me some courage. Slowly fellow smokers approach me asking you for a light or something and we begin to chat. Then you see them the next day, and the next. Smokers where a regular group and nothing beats anxiety better than regularity and expectations. Helped actually. This isn't the lecture part, but I'm still stuck with that addiction now. It's a source of it's own anxiety. I've almost completely forgotten my social anxiety now — it just comes easier now some 15 years later — but I gotta admit, my compulsive need to smoke, especially now that nobody else smokes around me, has started becoming a source of anxiety. Funny how that goes.
 
What about electronic cigarettes ? They still contain nicotine so they give same effect right ? Minus the harmful tobacco
 
I actually read this in the paper a few months ago:

Smokers are around 70 per cent more likely to suffer from depression and anxiety, a study has revealed.

Researchers said quitting smoking could help people combat the conditions, thereby improving their mental health.

They found that levels of anxiety and depression reported by long-term ex-smokers were indistinguishable from people who have never smoked.

They were also much lower than current smokers.

The study looked at 6,500 people over the age of 40.

It found that 18.3 per cent of smokers reported suffering depression and anxiety, compared with 10 per cent of non-smokers and 11.3 per cent of ex-smokers.

The research, described as the first of its kind to compare the prevalence of anxiety and depression in smokers, non-smokers, and long-term ex-smokers.

The latter group is defined as smokers who have quit for longer than a year.

Experts behind the new study said it dispels the commonly-held perception that lighting up helps relieves stress.

Lead researcher Robert West, professor of health psychology at UCL (University College London), said: 'Our study found that long-term ex-smokers have similar prevalence of anxiety and depression to non-smokers and considerably lower levels than smokers.

'Quitting smoking could be the key to improving not only your physical health, but your mental health too.'

The British Heart Foundation (BHF) released the findings ahead of No Smoking Day on March 11.

Associate medical director of the charity, Dr Mike Knapton, said: 'There is a belief from many smokers that smoking reduces anxiety and stress, which is in turn causing many smokers to put off quitting.

'Yet, instead of aiding people to relax, smoking increases anxiety and tension.

'When smokers light up, the feeling of reduced stress or relaxation is temporary and is soon replaced by withdrawal symptoms and cravings.

'While smoking temporarily reduces these cravings and feelings of withdrawal - which are similar to feeling anxious or stressed - it does not reduce or treat the underlying causes of stress.'

Nearly one in five UK adults smoke, according to the BHF.

SMOKING INCREASES SUICIDE RISK

Smokers are more likely to commit suicide than those who never take up the habit - and the chemicals in cigarettes may be to blame.

Previous research has indicated that smokers are more likely to take their own lives - but it was thought this was because people with psychiatric disorders also tend to smoke.

Researchers from Washington University, St. Louis, suggested the nicotine in tobacco could trigger psychiatric disorders - or make them more severe.

Research published last year found that quitting smoking can be just as effective in tackling depression and anxiety as taking antidepressants.

In fact, the effect of quitting was the same, if not bigger, than for the tablets.

The team, from the universities of Birmingham, Oxford, and King’s College London, analysed 26 studies for their research.

Writing online in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), they said they found people who quit smoking experienced a significant drop in anxiety, depression and stress.

The effect was the same among the general population of smokers as those with a diagnosed mental health problem.

The researchers said: 'Both psychological quality of life and positive affect significantly increased between baseline and follow-up in quitters compared with continuing smokers.

'Smoking cessation is associated with reduced depression, anxiety, and stress and improved positive mood and quality of life compared with continuing to smoke.'
 
Smoking didn't stop the anxiety but when I smoked it kept my mind and hands (which both go wild during bad episodes) focused on the act. This isn't a good habit to get into, when I'm highly anxious I sometimes chain smoke until nauseous, and occasionally until I vomit. Nicotine gives me a short and crappy stim buzz, nothing even close to an anxiolytic.
 
Nicotine does help with ADHD as long as you keep taking it.

I don't think nicotine works as an anxiolytic IME (I dont have ADHD though) but if you're smoking with a group of people then it could help you bond with them easily because you're all doing the same thing and because nicotine is an stimulant.
 
I have generalized anxiety disorder and im a smoker. When im in a stressful situation, it helps me to take a few mins and go smoke. When im in an anxious state, it does help to be able to go and have a cigarette but thats only because im able to either LEAVE to go smoke, or because it gives me something else to focus on...so i wouldnt say the cigarette itself is actually helping, more of the act/routine of smoking is what helps me.
If youre not already a smoker, i dont think you should start. There are plenty other better ways to help with anxiety.
 
I have pretty bad social and generalized anxiety, and I get pretty bad panic attacks too and it really doesn't seem to help for me, only in the aspect that I can leave the situation that is causing me anxiety and go have a smoke, either alone or with someone I don't feel anxious around. and let me tell you, I have an electronic cig that I bought to smoke inside my house and to use when I run out of cigs, and it doesn't really give me a nic fix, just gives me something to fall back on. so I don't think it would be helpful if your looking to use cigs for anxiety.
 
Specifically social anxiety (that may be caused by adhd) so is smoking normal cigarettes helpful for this ? Since i read nicotine releases endorphines and dopamine in brain.

N.B please i dont want to hear smoking is bad or dont smoke cause of its side effects. All i want to know is if it helps with social anxiety and adhd

It is very helpful for anxiety. Nicotine doesn't just release endorphins and dopamine, but also acetylcholine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, serotonin, and beta-endorphin, some of these will definitely help, others will enhance it.

Keeping the smoke in longer will make it sedate you instead of stimulate, so try both methods, one will work depending on your neurochemistry.

Short quick puffs help with ADHD-type symptoms of anxiety, whereas the longer held puffs are more for the nervous type.
 
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