Stress! Here is an excellent website that discusses short and long term physical and behavioral symptoms of stress: http://www.twilightbridge.com/stress/complete/4symptomsofstress.htm
All stress is equally harmful. They all give you the same symptoms which in turn could really hurt you.
The symptoms of a stress fracture include swelling, pain, and tenderness. If the pain decreases with rest, but increases with use it is possible there is a stress fracture.
Cold feet is not typically a symptom of stress. Symptoms of stress usually involve physical tension, a racing heartbeat, sweaty palms, and muscle tension.
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Some symptoms of stress include elevated heart rate, rapid breathing, nervousness, and hyperalertness.
Some symptoms of stress can be confused with other things. For instance headaches, backaches and anxiety might also just be though things. For a good overview of this topic you can go to http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/stress-symptoms/SR00008_D.
Sweating and irritability are two symptoms of story-term stress reactions.
Sweating and irritability are two symptoms of story-term stress reactions.
Stress may bring it on, but the symptoms may occur anytime
Symptoms such as bleeding, open wounds, fractures, or infections are physical manifestations of the injuries sustained in the terrorist incident and may not directly relate to long-term stress reactions. These physical symptoms require immediate medical attention and treatment, separate from addressing stress-related symptoms.
The accumulation of stress at unhealthy levels can result in a wide variety of symptoms. Fatigue, abdominal pain, headaches, chest pain, and mood swings, for example, are common results of high stress levels.
Depends on the patient. Stress in general aggrivates schizophrenic symptoms regardless of sub-type. What could be average, everyday stess for normal people could send some schizophrenics into severe acute psychosis or have no effect at all. As a generality though, stress aggrivates the symptoms of schizophrenia much like stress causing anxiety attacks in patients with anxiety disorders.