How Stress Affects Your Heart
For many people, stress is part of everyday life. The demands of work, family, and other
quotidian pressures can leave one feeling angry, agitated, anxious,
downtrodden, or burned out.
While these kinds of day-to-day challenges are often described as mild forms of stress, the reality is that some people will experience them more often and more significantly than others. And there’s mounting evidence linking these and other forms of stress to heart-related health problems.
“We know from several studies in different populations that emotional and psychological stress is associated with an increased likelihood of developing and dying of cardiovascular disease,” says Dr. Beth Cohen, a stress researcher and professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.
For example, research on stress in the workplace has found that people who are under regular strain or who work long hours are up to 40% more likely than their less-taxed counterparts to eventually develop heart disease or stroke. “There are also studies looking at what we call perceived stress, which is the amount of stress a person reports feeling, regardless of cause,” Cohen says. There again, research has found that people who report feeling a lot of stress are at elevated risk for cardiovascular problems down the road.
Meanwhile, some of Cohen’s work has examined the health effects of stress that stem from deeply traumatic experiences—such as those related to military combat service or interpersonal violence. She says post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other stress-related disorders are associated with increased cardiovascular disease risks.
But while stress appears to be a major risk factor for heart trouble, there’s a lot about the relationship between stress and heart health that experts are still sorting out. For example, how much stress is too much? “Not all challenging or stressful situations are unhealthy,” Cohen says. “Short-term stress in specific situations, such as working to overcome a difficulty, may actually be beneficial.” Another lingering question: Does stress itself damage the heart, or does stress lead to other things (smoking, poor sleep, an unhealthy diet) that cause the bulk of the harm? These are the types of questions that science has not fully answered.
Untangling the exact relationship between stress and health problems—including heart disease, but also other stress-related conditions such as Type 2 diabetes—is now the goal of research teams across the world. They’ve made progress in showing how stress may change a person—both inside and out—in ways that could contribute to heart trouble.