What Does Anger Do to Your Body?
Brief episodes of anger can negatively impact blood vessel function for as long as 40 minutes, as indicated by a recent study. Research from a meta-analysis indicates that engaging in activities that increase arousal, like shouting or physical exertion, may not be successful in alleviating anger. Practicing deep breathing techniques could be beneficial in lowering heart rate and calming down when experiencing anger.
What Does Anger Do to Your Body? Anger can make you feel heated in the moment, but also continues to affect your health even after you’ve cooled off.
This intense emotion has been associated with inflammation, digestive issues, and a higher risk of heart attacks. Even brief periods of anger can harm blood vessels for up to 40 minutes, according to a new study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
The research team randomized 280 healthy adult participants into study groups to observe the effects of anger, anxiety, and sadness on blood vessel health. Anger was the only emotion found to significantly impair blood vessel function.
“If you induce anger compared to the neutral condition, you can actually impair the ability of a blood vessel to dilate,” said Daichi Shimbo, MD, a board-certified cardiologist, professor of medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and lead author of the study.
This increased blood flow and hormonal surge can raise your body temperature and cause you to sweat. Normally, your blood vessels expand and constrict to regulate blood flow, but this function can be impaired during bouts of anger.
Frequent anger episodes can lead to lasting damage to blood vessel function, according to Shimbo.
“Once it’s chronic and your artery is impaired, that’s the time that the cascade starts to accelerate to heart disease risk,” Shimbo said.
While it might feel good to yell, vent, or go for a run, these arousal-increasing activities are not effective ways to manage anger, according to a recent meta-analysis.
“Most people don’t really know what to do when they’re angry,” said Sophie L. Kjaervik, PhD, an aggression researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University and lead author of the meta-analysis.
Instead of venting, try activities that can decrease arousal, such as meditation, yoga, and deep breathing, to help calm yourself down.5
Kjærvik SL, Bushman BJ. A meta-analytic review of anger management activities that increase or decrease arousal: what fuels or douses rage?. Clin Psychol Rev. 2024;109:102414. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2024.102414
“We find that decreasing arousal is consistently effective at decreasing anger because you’re decreasing your body’s fight mode, so that makes you less angry,” Kjaervik said.
Anger management will help reduce the frequency, intensity, and duration of the threat arousal, thereby reducing its physiological impact, according to Bernard Golden, PhD, a licensed clinical psychologist and founder of Anger Management Education in Chicago.
Golden recommends trying a slow, deep breathing exercise when you need to cool off: Inhale for four seconds, exhale for six seconds, and repeat.
“This particular rate of breathing has been found to slow down the heart rate,” Golden told Verywell in an email.
Practicing relaxation exercises, self-soothing with compassionate dialog, and reflecting on the thoughts and feelings that contribute to anger can also help manage this emotion, he added.
What Does Anger Do to Your Body? “Our anger is a reaction to and distraction from other uncomfortable feelings such as guilt, shame, powerlessness, rejection, sadness, or feelings of inadequacy,” Golden said. “Labeling our feelings has been found to reduce our anger.”