LucyL
Member
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2013
- Messages
- 1,245
Ray's newsletter from July 2017 said: "Stress modifies our breathing, causing a vicious cycle, in which the lactate and ammonia produced when stimulation exceeds our oxidative capacity stimulate more intense breathing, causing more carbon dioxide to be lost, reducing oxidative efficiency and increasing the formation of ammonia and lactate."
To me this certainly describes the role stress plays in the development of cancers. What's puzzling though, is why many people who live with chronic stress don't develop cancers. That to me seems to be the point where genetics may come into play.
To me this certainly describes the role stress plays in the development of cancers. What's puzzling though, is why many people who live with chronic stress don't develop cancers. That to me seems to be the point where genetics may come into play.