What Is Misophonia?
Emotional Reactions In Patients
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Misophonia has a wide variety of emotional reactions in patients, ranging from anxiety to outright suicidal thoughts. If patients have misophonia, they may hate the person making the sounds. They may wish to attack the individual causing the sounds, either verbally or physically. A mild reaction might have patients feeling disgust, discomfort, the urge to flee, or anxious. A more severe reaction to particular sounds can include panic, anger, rage, hatred, fear, emotional distress, crawling skin, a desire to stop or kill whatever is causing the sound, and suicidal ideation. This disorder can severely cramp a social and working life. It can cause patients to avoid situations that may bring about the sounds. If chewing drives patients into a fury, they will likely avoid social engagements at restaurants or that otherwise involve eating. Clicking pens can make work an ordeal in office situations. Simple yawning can make life at home a trial.
Learn about when the onset of misophonia occurs next.