“Anger is part of the fight, freeze, or flight response in which the adrenal glands flood the body with stress hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol,” explains Dr. Tafrate.
We experience physiological effects like an increased heart rate and blood pressure, rapidly pushing blood to the heart. The body is physically preparing to fight to defend itself or flee from danger.
RELATED: How Stress Affects the Body
While this stress response system in our body has evolved to protect us, in most cases, we don’t need that extra energy boost to deal with whatever is causing our anger (unexpected traffic, a child acting up, or a terrible email from a coworker).
And chronic activation of stress hormones leads to serious physical and mental illnesses. Here are some health effects of anger to know about:
1. Anger Stresses Out the Heart
Experiencing anger triggers the body to release stress hormones, which over time can take a toll on heart health. Research shows that anger (even momentary anger measured by changes in facial expression) results in changes in the heart that worsen the muscle’s ability to pump blood, which can lead to high blood pressure and subsequent complications (like heart disease, heart attack, stroke, and metabolic syndrome).
Research, accordingly, shows that people with higher anger (those who tend to perceive situations as hostile and are less capable of controlling their hostile thoughts and feelings) are at greater risk of coronary heart disease. Another study found that higher trait anger was also linked to higher risk of death from coronary heart disease and complications.
Anger also impacts people with arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats), according to Rachel Lampert, MD, the director of the Sports Cardiology Program at Yale Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.
“We’ve shown that if you’re prone to having ventricular arrhythmias (abnormal heartbeats that originate in your lower heart chambers) — or you’re prone to having atrial fibrillation (abnormal rhythm in the upper chambers) — the odds of having one of these arrhythmias are higher during times when you’re angry or stressed,” Dr. Lampert says. This is because adrenaline, which increases when you’re angry, can cause electrical changes in the heart.
2. Anger Increases Risk of Heart Attacks
Evidence also suggests that anger is specifically linked to higher risk of heart attacks.
In a systematic review that looked at studies with a total of nearly four thousand participants from more than fifty medical centers in the United States, researchers found a more than twofold increase in heart attacks within two hours after an anger outburst, an association that was also found to be stronger with increasing intensity of anger. This suggests more intense anger is indeed worse for your heart, the researchers noted.
RELATED: What Are the Symptoms of a Heart Attack?
3. Anger Can Disrupt Digestion
Much research shows that the brain and gut are in constant communication and influence each other. One role of our autonomic nervous system (which regulates involuntary bodily processes) is to help regulate digestion.
But that can be disturbed when the body goes into fight-or-flight mode, as can happen in response to stress.
“You can expect some changes in the function and performance of the gut,” said Pankaj Jay Pasricha, MD, the chair of medicine at Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona. Research shows, for example, that stress can lead to unpleasant symptoms in gastrointestinal tract (including abdominal pain, stomach upset, and diarrhea) — and over the longer term chronic stress has been linked to the development of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).
RELATED: Signs of an Unhealthy Gut — and What You Can Do About It
4. Too Much Anger Hinders Mental Health
Being in a state of anger strains can take a toll, too, on mental health. Studies show that anger is often elevated in emotional disorders, such as anxiety and depression, and is associated with both worse symptoms and a lesser response to treatment.
Anger (especially prolonged anger) can also affect our concentration and thinking patterns, according to APA. It can make us more hostile or cynical, which can take a toll on our relationships and ability to form bonds. All of this can certainly be damaging to well-being.
“Our anger reactions can cause harm to our most important relationships,” Tafrate said. Humans are social creatures, and we need social connections to thrive. “Anger can set the stage for nasty verbal rants or even violent behavior.”