Biological Stress
Any activity that puts pressures on living things and threatens to reduce their numbers or range. Although most biological stresses are human-caused, natural activities such as earthquakes or drought are also biological stressors.
-www.pima.gov/cmo/sdcp/kids/gloss.html
Biological stress is how a person's body responds to the demands of school or work. Stress can have negative affects on a person's mental state.
A. D. Brown has written: 'Microbial water stress physiology' -- subject(s): Biological Adaptation, Biological transport, Cells, Microorganisms, Osmoregulation, Physiological effect, Physiology, Stress (Physiology), Water, Water Microbiology
frost weathering, thermal stress, salt wedging, and biological weathering
A biological stressor is one that affects your body, like not being properly nourished. A life change stressor is an event or activity that occurs, like an accident, such as spraining your ankle.
A Stress on a Biological Organism, over time and, an overall balancing this stress, that isn't normally taken care of, by regular day to day, equalizations.
The Law of Stress states that Stress is the difference between Pressure and Adaptability of any kind. The law is expressed as a formula, S = P - A, or Stress = Pressure - Adaptability. This universal law is valid for physical, biological, and psychological stress. The Law of Stress concept was developed in 1978 by Dr. Robert Dato, an American Psychoanalyst.
A biological stresser would be an illness in the body causing stress. A life change stresser might be a divorce or death in the family.
stress is caused by a released hormone called "Epinephrine," or usually called "adrenaline," thus realising a environmental, biological, thinking, behavioral, and life change stress or stressor's (is what its mostly called in these kinds of stress), but don't worry there's positive stress that's the kind you need mostly.
Relating to a medical symptom or series of symptoms that have no biological base.
Stress and biological predisposition.
Exercise, sickness, stress, and biological disorders can all cause you to sweat.
A biological stressor is an internal stressor like illness, disability, and injury. An environmental stressor is a condition or event in your physical environment that cause you stress like pollution, poverty, crowding, noise, and natural disasters.