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    Home » Why Do You Get More Panic Attacks at Night? Understanding The Triggers

    Why Do You Get More Panic Attacks at Night? Understanding The Triggers

    Reproduced only for reference to articles mentioning our name. All rights remain with the original publisher.

    While panic attacks can occur at any time, some people get them more at night. To know the reason, you must read the complete article.
    Only My HealthOnly My Health Mind & wellness May 22, 20263 Mins Read8 Views
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    Panic attacks that occur in the late-night hours are one of the most disorienting experiences of anxiety, because they happen when nothing appears to be wrong. The body is at rest, the environment is quiet, and yet the nervous system responds as though there is danger. This is not irrational, nor is it a sign that something is seriously broken; it reflects a specific aspect of how the brain handles unresolved stress when conscious distraction is no longer available. The worries and physical tension that a busy day keeps in the background have considerably more room to surface once everything goes still at night.
    Here are a few reasons why panic attacks happen at night, according to Dr Chandni Tugnait, Psychotherapist, Founder and Director, Gateway of Healing.

    Silence removes the safety net of distraction

    During daylight hours, the mind is occupied with tasks, screens, people, and noise. These are not just interruptions; they are buffers. They prevent anxious thoughts from gaining traction, but at night, when those buffers dissolve, suppressed fears and unprocessed worries rush in to fill the space. The brain then gradually begins scanning for threats that were politely ignored all day.

    Sleep transitions can mimic a threat signal

    How To Differentiate? The body does not simply switch off at night. As it moves between sleep stages, heart rate dips, breathing slows, and blood pressure shifts to perfectly normal. However, in an anxiety-sensitised system, these physical changes get misread. The brain interprets a reduced heart rate or a brief irregularity in breathing as danger, and it fires the alarm. A full panic response doesn’t trigger from threat, but from the body doing exactly what it should.

    Hormones work against you

    The body runs on internal rhythms, and stress hormones do as well. According to a study published in the journal ‘Brain, Behavior, and Immunity’, cortisol normally rises in the early morning to prepare the body for the day; however, continuous stress and poor sleep knock this cycle out of order, causing it to spike at the wrong time entirely, including in the middle of the night. For a nervous system already running at a heightened baseline, that unexpected surge is enough to trigger a full anxiety response with no external cause in sight.

    Fear of sleep exacerbates the cycle

    Once someone has experienced a panic attack, bedtime becomes loaded with anticipation. That vigilance, lying still, listening to every heartbeat, actually elevates arousal and makes another attack more likely. It is a self-fulfilling loop, where panic becomes the very thing that invites it.
    Final Word If you experience nighttime panic attacks frequently, you must consult your therapist and seek professional help. This will help restore your psychological health and bring harmony to your life.

    FAQ

    • How can I stop a panic attack at night?

      The best thing to stop a panic attack at night is to get out of bed and splash some cold water on your face.
    • What is the fastest way to stop a panic attack?

      The easiest and fastest way to stop a panic attack is by controlling your breathing. Additionally, shock your senses, use grounding techniques, and do muscle-relaxing exercises.

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      emotional wellbeing Human Behavior Lifestyle wellbeing Mental Health Awareness Mental wellness Nighttime Anxiety Panic Attacks Stress and Anxiety
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      Dr. Chandni Tugnait is the founder of Gateway of Healing, a TEDx speaker, Relationship Expert – Tinder India, NeuroEnergetic Transformation Coach, Psychotherapist, Life Coach, Business Coach, NLP Expert, and Healer. Over the past 15 years, she has transformed lives of more than 50,000 individuals through her work. Featured in over 500 leading media publications, Dr. Chandni is recognized for her expertise in mental health, personal growth, and relationships. Her mission is to empower people to achieve success and well-being through the alignment of energy, mindset and action.
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