Landurige
stress verlaagt immuniteit
Het lange artikel hieronder van de American Psychological Association heeft
eigenlijk als titel:Stress affects immunity in ways related to stress type and
duration
Het is niet 1 enkele studie, maar een meta-studie een grote Meta-analyse dus
die 293 onafhankelijk peer-reviewed studies bekeek en opzoek ging naar een
gemeenschappelijke factoren.
Men vond dat korte stress periodes het immuunsysteem eerder versterkt; en dat
chronische, langdurige stressors er meestal toe lijden dat het immuunsysteem
verzwakt, ... en allerlei infecties e.d. de kans krijgen door te breken.
In de praktijk hangt veel af van stress type en de duur ervan.
Het immuunsysteem van oudere of reeds zieke mensen is gevoeliger voor stress
gerelatteerde veranderingen ( verzwakkingen).
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-07/apa-sai062904.php
Public release date: 4-Jul-2004
American Psychological Association http://www.apa.org/
Stress affects immunity in ways related to stress type and duration
Clear patterns emerge outlining greater damage from chronic stress
WASHINGTON -- Psychologists have long known that stress affects our ability
to fight infection, but a major new "meta-analysis" - a study
of studies - has elucidated intriguing patterns of how stress affects human
immunity, strengthening it in the short term but wearing it down over time. The
report appears in the July issue of Psychological Bulletin, which is
published by the American Psychological Association.
Major findings are three-fold. First, the overlapping findings of 293
independent studies reported in peer-reviewed scientific journals between 1960
and 2001 - with some 18,941 individuals taking part in all -- powerfully
confirm the core fact that stress alters immunity.
Second, the
authors of the meta-analysis observed a distinctive pattern: Short-term
stress actually "revs up" the immune system, an adaptive response
preparing for injury or infection, but long-term or chronic stress causes too
much wear and tear, and the system breaks down. Third, the immune systems of
people who are older or already sick are more prone to stress-related change.
Psychologists Suzanne Segerstrom, PhD, of the University of Kentucky, and
Gregory Miller, PhD, of the University of British Columbia, analyzed the
results of the nearly 300 studies by sorting them into different categories
and statistically evaluating relationships. For example, the five
stressor categories included:
Acute time-limited stressors: lab challenges such as public speaking or mental
math.
Brief naturalistic stressors: real-world challenges such as academic tests.
Stressful event sequences: a focal event such as loss of a spouse or major
natural disaster gives rise to a series of related challenges that people
know at some point will end.
Chronic stressors: pervasive demands that force people to restructure their
identity or social roles, without any clear end point - such as injury
resulting in permanent disability, caring for a spouse with severe dementia, or
being a refugee forced from one's native country by war.
Distant stressors: traumatic experiences that occurred in the distant past yet
can continue modifying the immune system because of their long-lasting
emotional and cognitive consequences, such as child abuse, combat trauma or
having been a prisoner of war.
The psychologists also looked at the effects of the various stressors on
different immune responses, such as natural and specific immunity. Natural
immunity produces quick-acting, all-purpose cells that can attack many
pathogens; they bring fever and inflammation. While they fight on the front
line, the body takes a few days to mount a more efficient attack on
specific invaders via the lymphocytes (T-cells and B cells) of specific
immunity.
Specific
immunity has both cellular responses, which fight pathogens that get inside
cells (such as viruses), and humoral responses,which fight pathogens that stay
outside cells, such as bacteria and parasites. Scientists have identified the
blood markers of these different
immune responses; stress studies measure them to indicate stress response.
As a result, Segerstrom and Miller were able to assess how different types of
immune response correlated with different types of stress.
Write the authors, "Stressful events reliably associate with changes in
the immune system and.characteristics of those events are important in
determining the kind of change that occurs."
Acute time-limited stressors, the type that produce a "fight or
flight" response, prompted the immune system to ready itself for
infections resulting from bites, punctures, scrapes or other challenges to the
integrity of the skin and blood. In evolution, this response would be
selected as adaptive. Brief stressors enhanced quick, energy-efficient natural
immunity, to help the body meet the challenge prompting fight or flight. At the
same time, certain aspects of specific immunity that consume time and energy
were suppressed.
Stressful event sequences seemed to be weakly associated with different immune
consequences, depending on the type of event. The data suggested different
patterns for bereavement (loss) and trauma, but the authors didn't see
associations strong enough to make new claims. In this regard, further study is
needed.
The most chronic stressors - which change people's identities or social roles,
are more beyond their control and seem endless -- were associated with the most
global suppression of immunity; almost all measures of immune function dropped
across the board. Duration of stress came into play: The longer the stress, the
more the immune system shifted from potentially adaptive changes (such as those
in the acute "fight or flight" response) to
potentially detrimental changes, at first in cellular immunity and then in
broader immune function. Thus, stressors that turn a person's world upside down
and appear to offer no "light at the end of the tunnel" could have
the greatest psychological and physiological impact.
Finally, Segerstrom and Miller found that age and disease status affected a
person's vulnerability to stress-related decreases in immune function. They
attribute this to how illness and age make it harder for the body to regulate
itself.
The authors are satisfied that their meta-analysis confirms the value of
looking at stressors and immunity in greater detail to learn the
mechanisms underlying the body's response to stress. In this case, defining
stressor types and examining natural vs. specific and cellular vs. humoral
immune responses turned up useful information. Says Miller, "A
meta-analysis lets
you ask questions that are too big for any one study to answer. You see if things
are consistent over the gamut of labs, methods and people."
Future studies, the authors hope, will look at the role of behavior in the
stress-immunity pathway. For example, optimism and coping are known to mitigate
the immune response to stress. Further, they write that the most pressing
question facing researchers is, "the extent to which stressor-induced
changes in the immune system have meaningful implications
for disease susceptibility in otherwise healthy humans." The field of
psychoneuroimmunology has yet to tie together the various threads of research
to determine whether immune system changes are the reason that stress makes
people more likely to get sick.
###
Article: "Psychological Stress and the Human Immune System: A
Meta-Analytic
Study of 30 Years of Inquiry," Suzanne C. Segerstrom, Ph.D., University of
Kentucky, and Gregory E. Miller, Ph.D., University of British Columbia;
Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 130, No. 4.
(Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office
and at www.apa.org/journals/bul/press_releases/july_2004/bul1304601.html
Suzanne Segerstrom can be reached at scsege0@uky.edu or (859) 257-4549.
Gregory Miller can be reached at (604) 822-3269 or gemiller@psych.ubc.ca
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