Stress Hives

Health Effects of Stress-anxiety
Author: Robert Baird
The mind and body act on each other in remarkable ways. Recent research indicates that the immune system is in direct contact with and under at least partial control of the part of the brain physiologically reactive to emotions. Thus there may be a biological link between emotions and disease and even death. Mortality is three times higher in individuals with few close relationships, whereas people with strong support groups have additional protection against life stressors. Death rates are higher for cancer patients with pessimistic attitudes. Illness is more common among people who feel locked into strife-ridden marriages. Conversely, AIDS patients with healthy psyches seem better able to withstand disease.
Any stressful situation takes its toll on the human body. Stress can be a primary enemy of overall health and a major contributor to disease. Because stress affects the immune system, the body becomes more susceptible to a multitude of ailments, from colds to cancer. Respiratory conditions, such as asthma, may become worse. The cardiovascular system reacts by constricting the blood vessels while increasing blood volume. The net result is a rise in blood pressure throughout a stress-ridden day. Multiple increases in blood pressure can eventually contribute to chronic high blood pressure. More forceful contraction of the heart elevates levels of free fatty acids, enhancing the development of clogged arteries leading to and including the heart itself. In extreme cases, sudden death can occur, especially if an individual has been experiencing high levels of uncontrolled stress for an extended period.
Headaches, including migraines, have long been associated with stress. Tension headaches are caused by involuntary contractions of the scalp, head, and neck muscles. Typical muscular reaction to stress is contracting or tensing. When chronic stress occurs, the body reacts by being constantly ready to respond and the muscles become braced, or always in a state of tension. More stress magnifies the tension the muscles are already undergoing. Increased muscular tension manifests itself in headaches, backaches, neck aches, and other pains. The smooth muscles that control internal organs also experience pains. More intense contractions can lead to stomach ache, diarrhea, hypertension, heartburn, gastritis, diarrhea, bloating, inflammation of the pancreas, and blockage of the bile ducts
Stress decreases saliva in the mouth, often making speaking awkward. Swallowing may become difficult, and the increase in stomach acids contributes to ulcer pain. People tend to perspire more, and electrical currents are transmitted more quickly across the skin. Skin conditions, such as acne, psoriasis, herpes, hives, and eczema, are exacerbated.
Stress also seems to affect the body’s nutritional status and immune response to disease. Individual nutritional patterns can also influence stress management efforts. For example, eating too much or too little, eating the wrong kinds of food, and overusing products such as caffeine or alcohol upset homeostasis. Diets high in fat, sugar, and processed foods place a heavy burden on various body systems. Ingesting too few calories can lead to the breakdown of lean tissue. To meet the demands of stress, you should maintain adequate nutrition through a balanced and varied diet.
Ultimately, no body system escapes the effects of stress. Long-term presence of certain stressassociated hormones in the brain damages receptors and cells found in the hippocampus. (The hippocampus sends messages when stress is occurring.) Because brain cells do not regenerate, these cells are lost forever. The effects of this loss are unknown, but indications are that eventually humans become less able to respond to stress appropriately provides guidelines for identifying stress style and suggests relaxation activities.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/mental-health-articles/health-effects-of-stressanxiety-326877.html
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Take a calcium and magnesium supplement, will help. Take a bath in Oatmeal and baking soda if you are itchy. You can pulverize the oatmeal in the blender to turn it into a powder or just put some in a stocking and tie off and rub on body in a tepid bath.
Can stress cause you to break out in hives?
I went to my doc cause I have this rash all over my body… and he said it looks like stress hives… Can stress really do that to a person???? How can I get rid of them.. the stress Im going through right now is not about to end.. (my dad was overdosed in a hospital and died from it)
Sorry about your dad.
Yes, stress does cause hives. Try Benadryl. it works.
Hang in there and good luck.
Can you get hives caused from stress?
I am an extremely high stress person, and I am also allergic to lactose as in I get hives when I eat dairy products. But I have noticed that sometimes I get hives even when I haven’t eaten anything dairy, I was just wondering if they could be caused by stress. Also I know for sure that they are hives, and I am not confusing them with something else.
Stress is NOT the second most common cause of hives, especially when we are talking about any form of chronic hiving. There is one type of hiving which is due to stress, but it is rather rare, with only a few cases actually reported in the medical literature. It is called adrenergic urticaria. It was first recognized in the 1980s.
One article about it:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2865515
The most common type of stress-related hiving is something called cholinergic urticaria. It is a form of chronic urticaria triggered by an increase in core body temperature, such as a hot day, taking a hot bath or shower, eating spicy foods, or strong emotions (anger, embarassment). It most often seen in young men in their teens and 20s, but can strike either sex at any age. To learn more about cholinergic urticaria, check out
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1049978-overview
And to learn more about chronic urticaria in general, check out http://www.chronichives.com
How can I treat stress induced hives?
This has been miserable. My entire body is covered in hives and I went to the ER last night and was sent home with instructions to keep a food diary and take benedryl. My entire body is now covered in hives and I haven’t eaten anything that I don’t eat all the time. Help!
I keep breaking out with hives, could it be stress?
I have been extremely stressed lately since I am on a mad search for housing. Last night and tonight I have broken out with hives. Severe hives on my chest, neck, and back, moderate hives on my arms and legs.I changed my laundry detergent back to what I was using, thinking it was that but I am still breaking out with hives. Could extreme stress cause this?
Can a dog get hives from just stress?? Or only from a allergy to something they are around or ate?
My dog is a mini daschund, 2 years old. Recently we’ve added a new dog to our home, and 2 times this week she’s broke out in hives all over. Including around her eyes and face.
stress can do that, but don’t rule out other things