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Stress Relief Articles |
Heart Rate: An Anxiety Stress Symptom You Can MonitorSymptoms of Stress Stress is a mind-body event that affects our whole being. Emotional symptoms of stress include irritability, anxiousness, depression, and even the inability to feel emotions. Cognitive symptoms the include inability to think clearly, confusion, inattention, intermittent dyslexia, and loss of normal cognitive ability. Physical symptoms include restlessness, fatigue, sweating, palpitations, elevated blood pressure, and elevated heart rate. Heart Rate as an Anxiety Stress Symptom When you are stressed, your sympathetic nervous system secretes stress hormones, notably adrenaline, which prepares your body for "fight or flight." When the stress has been dealt with, the stress hormones are used up and our parasympathetic nervous system is activated, and it allows us to "rest and digest." In a state of health, these two systems balance each other out. We can rarely run from or fight the stressors of modern life, however, so we continue to secrete stress hormones and become hypervigilant. We are constantly in an alert state, constantly ready to run or do battle. Normally, our hearts beat 60-100 times per minute when we are at rest. Our hearts pump out the blood our organs need, and our heart rate varies to meet the need. If you are exercising hard, your heart will beat faster to get more blood to your muscles. If you are sleeping, your heart will beat slower because your muscles don't need as much blood. People who are athletic or in very good physical condition often have resting heart rates below sixty beats per minute. Some very well-conditioned people have heart rates as low as 35 or 40. In addition, if you are healthy, your heart rate naturally slows or increases slightly as you breathe. Your heart rate varies like this because your sympathetic and parasympathetic systems are balanced, which is a state of health. This implies that your heart rate is an anxiety stress symptom that you can monitor, and you can use it to evaluate your progress in managing your stress. Monitoring Your Heart Rate as an Anxiety Stress Symptom Monitoring your heart rate and rhythm can do three things:
NOTE: Your heart rate will go down to the lower range of normal with any regular stress management program. Heart rates lower than 60 beats/minute are only normal if you are exercising vigorously and regularly. If you have any questions or concerns, always check with your doctor. |
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Heart Rate: An Anxiety Stress Symptom You Can Monitor
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