The biological mechanisms linking psychological stress to cardiovascular damage — cortisol, catecholamines, inflammation, and platelet activation — with evidence on specific stressor types (work stress, grief, PTSD) and validated interventions that reduce cardiac risk.
The connection between psychological stress and cardiovascular disease is not metaphorical or vague — it is mechanistic, measurable, and causally established. Cortisol directly raises BP, promotes visceral fat, worsens insulin resistance, and accelerates atherosclerosis. Catecholamines activate platelets and can rupture vulnerable coronary plaques during acute emotional surges.
This guide explains the precise biology of how stress reaches the heart, provides the quantified evidence on different stressor types, and covers the interventions with genuine RCT evidence for cardiovascular benefit.
HPA axis, sympathetic activation, inflammatory cascade, platelet activation, endothelial dysfunction, and behavioral amplification — each explained.
Whitehall II: high-effort, low-reward work = 40% elevated CHD risk. Occupational control as a cardiac risk factor.
MI risk 21-fold higher in the first 24 hours after bereavement (ONSET study). The biology of "broken heart."
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction — RCT evidence for cortisol, BP, CRP, and cardiac event reduction post-MI.
Heart rate variability as a measurable indicator of autonomic cardiac health and stress burden.
Holt-Lunstad: loneliness equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes/day for mortality — 30% elevated CVD risk.
“Stress is not a soft risk factor. When I see a patient with hard-to-control blood pressure, recurrent AFib, or an MI that happened "out of nowhere," I ask about their life. Often there is a bereavement, a job loss, a difficult marriage — and that context changes everything about how I approach their care. The heart does not operate separately from the mind that runs it.”
Because the heart does not operate separately from the mind running it.
Get Stress & Heart Guide — $37