Results 311 to 320 of about 1,563,293 (358)
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Orexin Neurons and Emotional Stress
2012Stress increases cardiac function, ventilation, and body temperature and induces analgesia. These changes, which result in an increase in metabolic rate, oxygen supply, and the conduction velocity of nerve impulses, prepare the body for a fight-or-flight response. A part of the hypothalamus called the defense area has long been known to play a key role
Tomoyuki, Kuwaki, Wei, Zhang
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Emotional Stress and Mongoloid Births
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 1964SUMMARYA retrospective study of mentally defective children in Edinburgh confirms Stott's findings of a significantly higher incidence of severe emotional stress in the pregnancies of mothers giving birth to infants with Down's syndrome than in the mothers of non‐mongoloid defectives. This was particularly marked in mothers aged 40 years and over.
C M, DRILLIEN, E M, WILKINSON
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Plasminic Activity and Emotional Stress
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 1974Hereditary angioneurotic edema (HANE) is clearer in the etiology than the other types of angioneurotic edema. It shows abnormal serum complemental activity and various clinical signs.
H, Teshima, S, Inoue, Y, Ago, Y, Ikemi
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Emotional Stress and Cardiac Disease
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1977To the Editor.— The description by Drs Eliot and Forker (236:2325, 1976) is valuable in describing an important aspect of the complex interaction between emotion and cardiac diseases. It is not the absence of mention of the reverse relationship of "emotional stress" secondary to cardiac disease that concerns me. The virtual dismissal, however, of the
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Periodontal Emotional Stress Syndrome
Journal of Periodontology, 1976Eleven cases are presented which demonstrated severe periodontal bone loss especially in the posterior segments of the mouth in a group of young men, ages 22 to 32, unexplained by other local etiologic factors. The only common denominator in all cases was severe emotional stress associated with active duty in Viet Nam.
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OCCUPATIONAL STRESS AND EMOTIONAL ILLNESS
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1956• The tendency to ascribe emotional and physical illness to overwork led to a study of 91 patients in an attempt to identify the occupational factors involved. A variety of occupational situations was found to precipitate psychic and somatic symptoms.
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LABORATORY PROCEDURES AS AN EMOTIONAL STRESS
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1956• The emotional reactions aroused by diagnostic laboratory tests were studied in 30 patients, who were interviewed by a psychiatrist within 24 hours after such procedures. Instances of extreme reaction occurred in uninformed or misinformed patients, who not only feared the apparatus but also drew unwarranted inferences as to the nature and gravity of ...
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ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC INDICES OF EMOTIONAL STRESS
American Journal of Psychiatry, 1956Many investigators have reported that persons under emotional stress display characteristic electrocardiographic changes. Some of these reports are reviewed to determine whether any generalizations are evident. From the published data, it appears that case and population studies overlap considerably with respect to the effects on the ECG of transient ...
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