No. It's how the stress can manifest that might cause problems.
You can always get disease, but the ways that stress affects your body can make you more vulnerable to disease
No. It is a genetic disease.
Stress incontinence is a urological and kidney disease that commonly affects millions of men and women across the globe. Stress incontinence is treated through stretching.
Stress hormones such as cortisol can lower the immune system.
A stress echo is used to diagnose heart disease. One way the need for this would be indicated is if you have a family history of heart disease and another would be if you have physical precursors for heart disease.
Yes, definitely!
Hypertension from stress and hypertension from kidney disease both push blood pressure higher, but they're driven by different mechanisms and need distinct approaches. Stress-related hypertension ties back to the body's "fight or flight" response. When you're stressed, hormones like adrenaline and cortisol surge, speeding up your heart and tightening your blood vessels, so pressure rises. If stress sticks around, or if people pick up habits like smoking, drinking, skimping on sleep, or eating poorly, high blood pressure can become a long-term problem. On the other hand, kidney disease throws off blood pressure in a different way. Damaged kidneys can’t keep fluid and salt levels in check or manage blood pressure hormones properly. The body holds on to extra fluid and sodium, which boosts the pressure inside blood vessels. Kidney disease can cause high blood pressure, and, frustratingly, high blood pressure can harm the kidneys even more. Here’s where the differences stand out: Stress-related hypertension tends to bounce up and down. It usually gets better if people manage stress, exercise, get enough sleep, practice relaxation techniques, and make healthier choices. Hypertension from kidney disease sticks around and can be stubborn unless you go after the kidney issue itself. People with kidney-caused high blood pressure often have off-kilter kidney tests, swelling, protein in the urine, or changes in how they pee. Treating renal hypertension usually means drugs that protect the kidneys, like ACE inhibitors or ARBs, along with direct treatment of the kidney disease. To figure out what’s fueling the high blood pressure, doctors rely on blood and urine tests, plus kidney scans. These help determine whether the root is in the kidneys or elsewhere.
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.
yes it can so be careful
Glaucoma has not been linked to unmanaged stress. Unmanaged stress can lead to various health issues such as obesity and heart disease.
The impact of prolonged psychological stress on the body causes cell aging and influences disease processes
Chronic stress can contribute to the development of heart disease by increasing inflammation, raising blood pressure, and promoting unhealthy behaviors like smoking and overeating.