so my understanding about propranolol, is that the effects aren't mental - it doesn't take away anxious thoughts - but rather blocks the physical symptoms of anxiety.
my question is, because of this, does it help with long-term fear-reduction though desensitization? if you expose yourself to fearful situations enough times, that fear starts to fade away. now, if you take other anti-anxiety drugs like alcohol or benzos, if anything the opposite happens and you become dependent on these substances. but with beta blockers, would you not become dependent on them and actually feel more comfortable in those situations because you have been more exposed to them?
I'm going to disagree with focus83 on this one. Beta-Blockers have definitely helped retrain my physical reaction to fear-inducing situations. I do a lot of public speaking/training and despite years of doing this, my fear response had always been very very pronounced. Shaking hands and legs, excessive saliva/swallowing, even if I wasn't mentally nervous at all. I started using beta blockers, and of course they cancelled the fear response, which was amazing, but from that point on, I noticed that my fear response had reduced even when I didn't have the beta-blockers on hand. After about a year and a half of periodic beta-blocker use, my fear response is probably about half what it used to be, even without beta blockers. This is a relatively common phenomenon from what I understand. I've read a lot of similar accounts online. A lot of my performance anxiety response came from the fact that I knew that once I got up there that rush of fear was coming. Beta-blockers allowed me to have several positive performance experiences, free from anxiety, and thus reduced my "fear of the fear" if that makes sense.
Edit: Though I've been taking metroprolol and atenolol, neither of which have much of an ability to cross the blood brain barrier so that may have something to do with our differing experiences.
And to the OP, unfortunately, I don't think Beta-blockers would be the most effective solution for your type of anxiety. They are really for performance anxiety only. They will not alter the way you think, only your body's physical reaction to anxiety. Also, they do have depression as a long-term side effect, which in your case wouldn't be ideal. And as one commenter mentioned, they definitely blunt any stimulants you might be using simultaneously, probably including ritalin.
Edited by Zoroaster, 13 December 2009 - 01:51 AM.