stress
(noun)
The activation of the body's emergency fight-or-flight response.
(noun)
An emotional or mental feeling of strain and/or pressure.
Examples of stress in the following topics:
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Managing Stress Through Conventional and Alternative Medicine
- Stress management resources aim to control or diminish a person's level of stress through both conventional and alternative methods.
- Stress management resources aim to control a person's level of stress, whether chronic and recurring or acute and unique.
- Stress management techniques provide a way to cope with stress and its symptoms to promote and maintain general well-being.
- This finding led to the belief that stress was somehow outside of or beyond the control of the person experiencing stress.
- This precept allows stress to be controlled by the person and provides the basis for most stress management techniques.
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How Stress Impacts our Health
- Stress is a necessity for life and is a primary biological incentive for all.
- Acute stress occurs in the short-term and is usually resolved rather quickly; chronic stress is long-term and usually unresolved, leading to a variety of problems.
- Many people experience some type of depressive mood or feeling in relation to stress, and excessive amounts of stress has been shown to contribute to depression or anxiety.
- One of the most serious ways that stress can impact psychological well-being is in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
- Cortisol, also known as the "stress hormone", plays an integral role in our body's reaction to stress.
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Coping with Stress
- In the case of stress, coping mechanisms seek to master, minimize, or tolerate stress and stressors that occur in everyday life.
- The root of stress is the cognitive appraisal of an event as stressful or stress-inducing.
- Men and women also assess stress differently but tend to cope with stress similarly.
- Some cultures promote a head-on approach to stress and provide comforting environments for managing stressful situations, while others encourage independence and self-sufficiency when it comes to coping with stress.
- A person's perception of stress and ability to cope with that stress are products of many different influences in life.
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Introduction to Stress
- One basic definition of stress is "a psychological feeling of strain and pressure."
- Stress can be either positive (eustress) or negative (distress).
- Eustress, or positive stress, on the other hand, is the positive emotional or cognitive response to stress that is healthy; it gives a feeling of fulfillment or happiness.
- Stress management is the application of methods to either reduce stress or increase tolerance to stress.
- Relaxation techniques are physical methods used to relieve stress.
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The Endocrine System and Stress
- Stress is the simple name for what happens when the body's emergency response is activated; a stressful event is one that activates the sympathetic (fight-or-flight) nervous system.
- In experimental studies in rats, a distinction is often made between social stress and physical stress, but both types activate the HPA axis, albeit through different pathways.
- Stress hormone release tends to decline gradually after a stressor occurs.
- In post-traumatic stress disorder there appears to be lower-than-normal cortisol release, and it is thought that a blunted hormonal response to stress may predispose a person to develop PTSD.
- Children who were stressed prenatally may show altered cortisol rhythms.
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Specific Effects of Stress: Cancer
- While psychological stress alone has not been proven to cause cancer, prolonged psychological stress may affect a person's overall health and ability to cope with cancer.
- Psychological stress describes what people feel when they are under mental, physical, or emotional pressure.
- People who have cancer may find the physical, emotional, and social effects of the disease to be stressful.
- However, there is no evidence that successful management of psychological stress improves cancer survival.
- Emotional and social support can help cancer patients learn to cope with psychological stress.
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Stress and Cardiovascular Disease
- Medical researchers are not sure exactly how stress increases the risk of heart disease.
- If stress itself is a risk factor for heart disease, it could be because chronic stress exposes your body to unhealthy, persistently elevated levels of stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol.
- However, managing one's stress levels and finding healthy outlets for stress is a crucial component for preventing cardiovascular disease.
- Things like yoga, meditation, reducing one's workload, and taking personal time to relax can reduce stress levels, aid in stress management, and reduce the risk of heart disease.
- Stress can lead to blockages of the arteries, known as atherosclerosis.
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How the Body Responds to Stress
- The body responds to stress in certain physiological ways.
- Although our bodies can respond to and deal with stress in the short term, long-term exposure to stress hormones can have detrimental effects.
- The sympathetic nervous system regulates the stress response via the hypothalamus.
- Stressful stimuli cause the hypothalamus to signal the adrenal medulla (which mediates short-term stress responses) via nerve impulses, and the adrenal cortex (which mediates long-term stress responses) via the hormone adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which is produced by the anterior pituitary.
- While psychological stress alone has not been proven to cause cancer, prolonged psychological stress may affect a person's overall health and ability to cope with cancer.
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Maintaining Motivation
- In psychology, stress is a feeling of strain and pressure.
- Stress produces numerous symptoms, which vary according to person, situation, and severity.
- Research indicates that stress may also play a role in the development of tumors.
- Small amounts of stress may be desirable, beneficial, and even healthy.
- Excessive amounts of stress, however, may hinder performance and decrease motivation.
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The Value of Social Support in Managing Stress
- The term "social coping" refers to a person seeking social support while under stress.
- Social support plays a major role in successful stress management.
- The stress and coping theory aligns with the buffering hypothesis; it states that social support protects people from the bad health effects of stressful events by influencing thought and coping ability.
- The presence of a social network that can either be expected to provide or actually provides social support can have extremely positive effects on the experience of stress and successful stress management.
- Discuss the roles of different kinds of social support in stress management