Anger Increases the Risk of Heart Disease

May 13, 2024

A team of doctors from New York has concluded that the feeling of anger unhealthy narrows blood vessels, which in the long run can increase the likelihood of heart disease. Researchers tracked the condition of participants' blood vessels in the experiment. As a result, it was found that the expansion of healthy blood vessels slows down when people get angry. The authors of the study noted that the inability of blood vessels to expand for a long period of time is often a precursor to the dangerous accumulation of fat on the walls of arteries, known as atherosclerosis.