Mental Stress
Mental Stress - most related articles:
-
Job promotion bad for mental health - 4.1
-
Majority of troops avoid couch talk - 3.9
-
20 minutes of housework boosts mental health - 3.8
-
High heart rate before exercise doubles heart attack risk in later life - 3.8
-
Happily married women are less stressful - 3.8
-
Exercise reduces menopausal anxiety, stress and depression - 3.5
-
Stress linked to breast cancer aggressiveness - 3.4
-
Middle aged women experience more stress - 3.3
-
Stress and depression depend on where you live - 3.3
-
Short stress may enhance learning and memory - 3.2
Mental Stress articles
Distressed young drivers take risks on roadYoung adults who take risks when driving are more likely to experience psychological distress, including mental health problems such as anxiety and depression, reveals research published ahead of print in Injury Prevention.
How breast cancer cells adapt to environmental stressAn international research team led by Dr. Tak Mak, Director, The Campbell Family Institute for Breast Cancer Research at Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH), has discovered a new aspect of "metabolic transformation", the process whereby tumour cells adapt and survive under conditions that would kill normal cells.
Passive smoking may lead to poorer mental healthSecond hand smoke exposure is associated with psychological distress and risk of future psychiatric illness, according to new UCL research that suggests the harmful affects of passive smoking go beyond physical health.
Stress raises memory loss in older diabeticsResearchers at the University of Edinburgh studied more than 900 men and women aged between 60 and 75 with type-2 diabetes, which tends to be common after the age of 40.
Anxious peoples tend to over reactPeople with generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD, have abnormalities in the way their brain unconsciously controls emotions, revealed by researchers.
Spanked children may have lower IQsChildren who are spanked have lower IQs worldwide, including in the United States, according to new groundbreaking research by University of New Hampshire professor Murray Straus.
Traffic noise raises blood pressurePeople exposed to high levels of noise from nearby roads are more likely to report suffering from hypertension, revealed by researchers in BioMed Central's journal Environmental Health.
Middle aged women experience more stressBoth blood pressure and serum lipid levels have improved in Swedish middle-aged women during the past 30 years. Levels of perceived mental stress, however, have increased significantly. These are the of a thesis presented at the Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Men struggling with emotional impact of recessionMen are struggling more to cope with the emotional impact of recession as compared to women, a new survey in Britain has revealed.
High heart rate before exercise doubles heart attack risk in later lifeFrench researchers have discovered a simple and cheap method of predicting who is at greater risk of dying suddenly and unexpectedly from a heart attack.
Stress and depression depend on where you liveFrequent Mental Distress (FMD), defined as having 14 or more days in the previous month when stress, depression and emotional problems were not good, is not evenly distributed across the United States.
Melanoma skin cancer linked to mental stressFor patients with a particularly aggressive form of skin cancer malignant melanoma stress, including that which comes from simply hearing that diagnosis, might amplify the progression of their disease.
20 minutes of housework boosts mental healthA Scottish Survey reveals first time that just 20 minutes of any physical activity, including housework, in a week is enough to boost mental health. While regular exercise is known to be good for mental health, no one seems able to agree on how much, or what type of activity, is best.
Majority of troops avoid couch talkMental disorders ranging from depression to alcoholism need to be de-stigmatized among military personnel to encourage troops to seek support when needed, according to a national investigation published in the February edition of the research journal, Medical Care.
Happily married women are less stressfulHappily married women are less stressful with better mental health, revealed by UCLA researchers. They tracked levels of cortisol, a key stress hormone, among 30 Los Angeles married couples.
Exercise gene could help with depressionBoosting an exercise-related gene in the brain works as a powerful anti-depressant in mice - a finding that could lead to a new anti-depressant drug target, according to a Yale School of Medicine report in Nature Medicine.
16 Mental Stress articles listed above.