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April 23, 2026

Hot Flashes With Anxiety: Telling Panic Flushing From Hormonal Flashes

Anxiety and true vasomotor flashes feel similar but have different triggers and treatments. They can also coexist and amplify each other. Here is how to tell them apart and what to do about each.

Hot Flashes With Anxiety: Telling Panic Flushing From Hormonal Flashes

Why It Happens With Anxiety

Anxiety and hot flashes share a final pathway, a surge of skin blood flow and sweating, but reach it differently. Anxiety drives it through an adrenaline (sympathetic) surge; hormonal flashes drive it through a destabilised hypothalamic set point. The clinical complication is that they frequently coexist and feed each other.

  • Adrenaline-driven flushing. During anxiety or panic, the sympathetic nervous system raises heart rate and skin blood flow, producing heat, flushing, and sweating, usually with a racing heart, chest tightness, or a sense of dread.

  • Bidirectional amplification. A hot flash can itself provoke anxiety (“here it comes again”), and anxiety lowers the flash threshold. In perimenopause the two often spiral together, which is why treating only one can disappoint.

  • Timing is the main discriminator. Anxiety flushing tracks stressful or anticipatory situations. Hormonal flashes occur independent of mood, including from sleep, and follow age and cycle patterns.

  • Shared mimics still apply. Hyperthyroidism produces both anxiety-like arousal and flushing, so it is the key medical cause to exclude when both are present.

What Makes Anxiety-Linked Flushing Different

The discriminating questions are trigger and accompaniment. Mood-locked episodes with dread, chest tightness, and a racing heart that build with a situation point to anxiety. Episodes that arrive unprovoked, including waking from sleep, and track cycle or age point to a hormonal flash. When both patterns are present, assume coexistence and plan to address both rather than forcing one label.

How to Manage

  • Characterise each episode. A short log of trigger, time, mood, and physical features usually separates anxiety-pattern from hormonal-pattern episodes, or shows both.

  • Exclude thyroid once. Hyperthyroidism mimics both halves of this picture and is easily tested.

  • Treat the anxiety component directly. Evidence-based anxiety management (behavioural strategies, and clinical treatment where warranted) reduces the adrenaline-driven episodes.

  • Treat the hormonal component on its merits. If a perimenopausal pattern is present, the standard vasomotor options apply, and certain SSRIs/SNRIs usefully address both anxiety and flashes at once.

  • Break the feedback loop. Reducing the fear of flashes (psychoeducation, paced breathing during onset) measurably lowers the combined burden.

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