Why does stress cause headaches?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Muscles tense around skull
Blood pressure drops suddenly — Wrong. Stress typically raises blood pressure temporarily. Stress headaches come from muscle tension, not blood pressure drops.
Muscles tense around skull ✓ — Correct! Stress triggers muscle tension—especially in neck, shoulders, jaw, and scalp muscles. These contracted muscles restrict blood flow and trigger pain receptors. This creates tension headaches (feels like a tight band around head). Stress also releases cortisol, which amplifies pain perception. Physical tension = headache!
Hormones block pain signals — Wrong. Stress hormones like cortisol actually increase pain sensitivity, not block it. Headaches come from muscle tension.
More Psychology & Behavior questions
- Why does wearing dark clothing sometimes make people look thinner?
- Two horizontal-striped dresses use different gaps. Why can their width illusion differ?
- Why do horizontal stripes sometimes make people look thinner?
- A glossy black jacket can still reveal curves. What cue gives them away?
- Against a dark or shadowed background, black fabric loses which size cue?
- Why does a black outfit sometimes make a person look slimmer than a white one, even when the clothing cut is identical?
