Heart Disease in Women
How Stress and the Pill May Impact the Progression of Heart Disease
By Christine Cadena, published Mar 31, 2007
Published Content: 3,275 Total Views: 1,955,454 Favorited By: 82 CPs
Stress can kill us and every day is performing a silent destruction upon your blood vessels creating the platform and complication of high blood pressure. With high blood pressure comes the first step in the creation of a great cardiovascular complication known as heart disease.
Stress hormones contribute to some profound physiological changes in our body. When adrenaline and noradrenaline are released, in response to stress, our bodies undergo a significant change in heart rate, respiration and even blood pressure often impairing our ability to physically move the extremities. The result is the release of additional sugar into the blood in an effort to boost our natural energetic response. When stress becomes chronic, we continually release these abnormal stress hormones and, as a result, our body never recovers physiologically.
For women, these stress complications are of greater concern as women, physiologically, respond more quickly and to a greater degree than that of men. As a result, women who are under chronic stress will commonly suffer from this silent killer, developing high blood pressure, well before their male counterparts.
Coupled with the physiological complications for women also comes the complications of heart disease that is created by the use of some forms of contraception, most notably, the Pill. While the Pill is considered a safe and effective form of contraception, many women who smoke when taking the Pill may find they are placing themselves at a greater risk for heart disease.
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Chris M. Carmichael
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Posted on 02/01/2008 at 9:02:06 AM