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Hypnosis

How Hypnosis Can Resolve Shortness of Breath

Shortness of breath can occur due to physical and/or emotional reasons.

Key points

  • Impaired breathing can lead to anxiety over feeling uncomfortable or even a fear for a patient’s life.
  • Anxiety-triggered shortness of breath can resolve with the aid of hypnosis.
  • It can sometimes be helpful to address psychological issues that may underlie the development of shortness of breath.
Dima Berlin/Shutterstock
Source: Dima Berlin/Shutterstock

Most of us have experienced shortness of breath with vigorous exercise, which improves rapidly with rest. A sensation of shortness of breath can occur for many other reasons as well, including poor physical conditioning, lung diseases such as asthma or pneumonia, and some heart diseases.

Anxiety can also lead to a feeling of shortness of breath. Further, when a patient becomes short of breath, it often causes anxiety because of the associated uncomfortable sensation and sometimes even a fear that the patient’s life is at risk. Thus, it is very common for patients who develop shortness of breath to become anxious, even if anxiety was not the initial cause.

Clues that anxiety may be involved in patients with shortness of breath include when they develop dizziness, a racing heart, tingling or numbness in their extremities (paresthesia), or appear fearful.

When clinicians only direct their therapy to address physical causes of shortness of breath, patients sometimes do not improve much because their anxiety continues to cause their breathing to feel abnormal. Their incomplete response to therapy makes many patients even more anxious, and, in turn, all the more breathless.

Treatment for Anxiety-Triggered Shortness of Breath

Fortunately, anxiety-triggered shortness of breath is one of the easiest symptoms to resolve with the aid of hypnosis. Patients can be taught to calm themselves by imagining a relaxing, safe place and thinking about what they might see, hear, smell, feel, and taste there. By so imagining, patients are able to change their mindset from anxious to calm, and thus relieve the uncomfortable feelings related to their breathing.

It has been demonstrated through magnetic resonance imaging that when patients imagine a particular sense, an activation occurs in the brain center that is responsible for analyzing that sense in real life. Thus, when patients think of their different senses, they are performing a “whole brain” activity.

When shortness of breath is the result of a physical illness it can still improve with the use of hypnosis because a reduction of anxiety can lead to improved tolerance of physical discomfort.

Identifying the Cause

The cause of shortness of breath is often obvious, such as when exercise, the stress of competition, or an underlying physical disease, like asthma, triggers the problem. However, when shortness of breath is the result of a psychological trigger, sometimes the cause is unknown at first. In such cases, it is often helpful to uncover the psychological issue so that it can be addressed.

Interactions with the subconscious through hypnosis can help identify such psychological issues. For example, one girl found out that she was short of breath because she did not want to tell her mother about her father’s improper behavior that she had witnessed (Anbar, 2004). She was worried that disclosing what she had seen would disrupt her parents’ marriage.

A boy’s subconscious told me that he had become short of breath because his father was pressuring him too much regarding his athletic achievements (Anbar & Linden, 2010). The boy did not want to tell his father about his feelings, for fear that his father would become angry with him. When I counseled both of these children about how to deal better with their family members, their shortness of breath resolved.

Takeaway

Shortness of breath can improve and sometimes resolve with the use of hypnosis and counseling.

References

Anbar, Ran D. 2004. “Stressors associated with dyspnea in childhood: patients’ insights and a case report.” Am J Clin Hypnosis. 47:93-101.

Anbar, Ran D, & Julie H. Linden. 2010. “Understanding dissociation and insight in the treatment of shortness of breath with hypnosis: a case study.” Am J Clin Hypnosis. 52:263-273.

More information about hypnosis and its use for shortness of breath is available in the 2021 book "Changing Children’s Lives with Hypnosis: A Journey to the Center," by Ran D. Anbar. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

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