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Stress. What is Stress? the body’s reaction to the physical and mental demands of daily life.

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Presentation on theme: "Stress. What is Stress? the body’s reaction to the physical and mental demands of daily life."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stress

2 What is Stress? the body’s reaction to the physical and mental demands of daily life

3 How does your body react to stress? adrenal glands release the hormone adrenaline which has positive AND negative effects

4 Stages of Stress alarm resistance exhaustion

5 -Body prepares for immediate confrontation -Helps you reach your goals -Body is alert and focused The Alarm Stage

6 Alarm Stage- Effects on the body breathing increases pupils dilate hearing sharpensdigestion slows heart rate increasesmuscles tighten more blood flow

7 The Resistance Stage body tries to return to normal

8 Resistance Stage- Effects on the body pupils constrict hearing returns to normal heart rate decreases muscles relax less blood flow

9 The Exhaustion Stage Body can no longer sustain its resistance The risk of stress related disease increases

10 Exhaustion Stage- Effects on the Body headachesulcersdiabetes depressed immune system high blood pressuregastritis heart diseasediarrhea strokesdeath

11 Types of Stress Short term Stress: -Occurs with emergency situations -Body returns to normal after the incident -This is NECESSARY stress and keeps you ALIVE!

12 Stress Long Term Stress: -Occurs with continual problems -Does not help the body adapt to the situation -Stress is not relieved so body doesn’t return to normal -This is BAD for the body!

13 Plan Ways to Manage Pressure www.vertex42.com blogs.zdnet.com

14 Managing Pressure: Talk

15 Managing Pressure: Redirect Physical activity!

16 Managing Pressure Relax www.arielbravy.com

17 Managing Pressure: Laugh www.sakthifoundation.org/ images/laughing1.jpg

18 Laughing helps arteries and boosts blood flow ・ 21:45 07 March 2005 ・ NewScientist.com news service ・ Andy Coghlan Laughing appears to be almost as beneficial as a workout in boosting the health of blood vessels, a new study suggests."Thirty minutes of exercise three times a week and 15 minutes of hearty laughter each day should be part of a healthy lifestyle," says Michael Miller of the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, US, whose team has shown that laughter relaxes arteries and boosts blood flow.He showed clips from the comedy movie King Pin to 20 volunteers. Before and afterwards, he made ultrasound measurements of blood flow and dilation in the brachial artery in the arm. The scans showed that in all but one of the volunteers, the volunteers' arteries relaxed and blood flowed more freely than usual for 30 to 45 minutes after the film.The opposite happened when the same people watched harrowing scenes from the war movie Saving Private Ryan. In 14 of the 20 volunteers, the artery wall constricted, reducing blood flow. Overall, blood flow decreased by 35% after the stressful clips and increased by 22% during laughter.Laughter liningsThe results suggest that laughter could help keep the lining of the arteries - the endothelium - healthy and thus reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. "At the very least, laughter offsets the impact of mental stress, which is harmful to the endothelium," Miller says."It's logical that positive emotions might have the opposite effect," says Andrew Steptoe of University College London, UK, whose studies in 2000 showed that acute mental stress impairs endothelial function. "There is increasing scientific interest in the possibility that positive emotional states are beneficial to health," he says.Miller, who presented his results to the American College of Cardiology meeting in Orlando, Florida, on Monday, now hopes to find out why laughter is beneficial. "We don't know if there's a direct effect by laughing, or an indirect effect by reducing stress.” http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7103


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