Yes, definitely!
YES!
Glaucoma has not been linked to unmanaged stress. Unmanaged stress can lead to various health issues such as obesity and heart disease.
Stress, heat, too cold, disease.
You can always get disease, but the ways that stress affects your body can make you more vulnerable to disease
Diabetes also can develop as a result of pancreatic disease, alcoholism, malnutrition, or other severe illnesses that stress the body.
Stress won't lead to a MRSA infection.
For years it has been "common knowledge" that people who are under a lot of stress have an increased risk of heart disease. But is this common knowledge correct? And if so, what kinds of stress increase the risk of heart disease, how does it increase your risk, and what can be done about it?Sorting out the effects of stress on the heart has been complicated by at least three factors: 1) people mean different things by "stress;" 2) some types of stress appear to be worse for the heart than others; and 3) how you respond to stress may be more important than the stress itself. In recent years we have learned a lot about stress and heart disease. This article and the links it provides will help you learn what you need to know about it.
PTSD does not cause heart disease, but any sort of stress can harm the heart. PTSD causes the heat rate and blood pressure to increase, and is a major cause of anxiety. This can be one of the triggers of heart disease, and can certainly worsen any sort of inborn weakness in the cardiac system.
No. It's how the stress can manifest that might cause problems.
It often does if the stress is great enough.
No. It is a genetic disease.