Yes, to varying degrees. If you have the most extreme scare, a death fright (Sorry ma’am you have an incurable disease you’re going to die in a month), you get an even more extreme special biological coping program: lung cancer. But for all regular scare, it’s a standard widening of the bronchioles to increase oxygen intake to make you more equipped to handle to conflict/threat.
You get scared sometimes, but you rarely get a disease right after. There's no direct chain of cause and effect. My wife gets scared a lot more than I, but we get sick around the same amount. By your logic, she would get more respiratory ailments than I.
By that logic, this would happen every time you get scared.
Depends on what you are afraid of.
Yes, to varying degrees. If you have the most extreme scare, a death fright (Sorry ma’am you have an incurable disease you’re going to die in a month), you get an even more extreme special biological coping program: lung cancer. But for all regular scare, it’s a standard widening of the bronchioles to increase oxygen intake to make you more equipped to handle to conflict/threat.
But that doesn't actually happen, so I'm going to have to reject your hypothesis.
Ok let’s hear your explanation.
You get scared sometimes, but you rarely get a disease right after. There's no direct chain of cause and effect. My wife gets scared a lot more than I, but we get sick around the same amount. By your logic, she would get more respiratory ailments than I.