Antonia Seligowski, PhD, of the Neurocardiac Effects of Stress & Trauma Laboratory within the Department of Psychiatry at ...
New research explores how hormonal contraceptive use may influence cardiovascular and thrombotic risk in women, including ...
The modern juggling act of careers, relationships, and personal responsibilities creates unprecedented pressure on young adults. Now, a groundbreaking study published in Neurology reveals this chronic ...
A new study suggests that women whose most distressing traumatic experiences occurred during childhood respond differently to biological stress than men or women traumatized later in life. The ...
That mysterious tightness in your hips isn’t just from sitting too long at your desk. For many women, the hip region serves as an emotional storage locker, holding onto stress, trauma, and tension in ...
One of the strongest predictors of long-term mortality among patients undergoing a cardiac stress test is the need for a pharmacologic versus treadmill test, new data show. Moreover, although the risk ...
Source: Lucie Bartikova/Shutterstock When Walter B. Cannon coined the term “fight or flight” in 1933 to describe stress behaviors, he likely didn’t consider that males and females might respond ...
Whilst it is true that women and men respond differently to stress, current neuroscientific research only partially confirms traditional gender stereotypes. Other factors heavily contribute to the ...