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  • When I was a kid, we got a new twisty tube-slide at the elementary school. Kids liked to clog

  • it up on purpose, with the kid at the bottom stopping and holding everyone else in the

  • pipe. Some kids thought it was a riot, but I felt trapped and immediately had a sense

  • of dread. I screamed, the kids unclogged, and I was instantly uncool. Was that claustrophobia?

  • Or something else?

  • In 1879, physician Dr. Benjamin Ball observed two patients in Paris who, curiously, couldn't

  • stay in their apartment with the doors closed without anxiety, and a third who was climbing

  • Saint-Jacques Tower, and felt an overwhelming urge to flee. She ran to the exit, "dashing

  • her head" in the process. Apparently, the urge immediately vanished upon reaching the

  • open air. Ball dubbed this bizarre feeling "claustrophobia,"

  • and the 1881 American Journal of Insanity called it "a special form of delirium, characterized

  • by a 'fear of closed spaces;'" today they include narrow spaces with enclosed ones.

  • The list of spaces is long, including subways, elevators, rooms without windows, public bathrooms,

  • tunnels, cars, hotel rooms, planes and so on. And even THINKING about it can trigger

  • an attacksorry. Most people who live with it don't get it formally diagnosed, because

  • there's no need to do so, their own fear causes those affected to spend much of their lives

  • avoiding trigger spaces.

  • The National Health Service in the UK says 10-percent of the population is affected by

  • claustrophobia, though studies find only about four percent will suffer from full-blown attacks.

  • I call it an attack, because psychologists and psychiatrists connect it to anxiety disorders,

  • believing it's essentially a short-lived panic attack. It might be caused by some kind of

  • childhood trauma. For example, losing one's parents in a crowded place, getting stuck

  • in a hole (or a slide?)... it's really hard to say.

  • Since the late 19th century, researchers have been digging into this crazy fear, and found

  • very little solid ground. A 2007 study in the Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging

  • found women were far more likely than men to experience claustrophobia, and a study

  • in the journal Cognition in 2011, found it may have to do with the invisible bubble of

  • "personal space" we all project around us. Most people's personal space extends only

  • as far as we can reach, but people with claustrophobia may be projecting their personal space beyond

  • their reach! Thus, when someone violates that territorial bubble, the person experiences

  • a panic attack! Researchers think this disorder may have a connection to acrophobia, or a

  • fear of heights; as people with claustrophobia seem to underestimate horizontal distances

  • the way acrophobics do with vertical ones. Essentially, they believe the room is smaller

  • than it really is. This study is about as far as we've come to understanding the disorder.

  • Perhaps it's a defense mechanism, and some are simply more sensitive to it

  • There does seem to be a genetic component as well. A 2013 study in Translational Psychiatry

  • found a single mutation on gene Gpm6a causes "claustrophobia-like" behavior in mice. Plus,

  • a study in Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences found people with panic disorders had significantly

  • smaller amygdalae: the section of the brain that processes fear!

  • In the end, they're still trying to figure out WHY some people experience claustrophobia.

  • As with most anxiety disorders, there's no true "cure." Symptoms can be managed, but

  • if the phobia is severe, specialists will recommend exposure therapy -- where the claustrophobic

  • person would be walked through imagining, and then experiencing the things that cause

  • the fear until they, essentially, get over it. It's rough, but so far, is the best we

  • have. More research is, for sure, needed.

  • What do you think? Have you experienced claustrophobia?

When I was a kid, we got a new twisty tube-slide at the elementary school. Kids liked to clog

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為什麼有些人有幽閉恐懼症? (Why Are Some People Claustrophobic?)

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    羅紹桀 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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