Stress, to put it bluntly, is bad for
you. It can kill you, in fact. A study now reveals that
stress causes deterioration in everything from your gums
to your heart and can make you more susceptible to everything
from the common cold to cancer. Thanks to new research crossing
the disciplines of psychology, medicine, neuroscience, and
genetics, the mechanisms underlying the connection are rapidly
becoming understood.
The first clues to the link between stress and health
were provided in the 1930s by Hans Selye, the first scientist
to apply the word "stress"-- then simply an
engineering term-- to the strains experienced by living
organisms in their struggles to adapt and cope with changing
environments.
One of Selye's major discoveries was that the stress
hormone cortisol had a long-term effect on the health
of rats.
Cortisol has been considered one of the main culprits
in the stress-illness connection, although it plays a
necessary role in helping us cope with threats. When an
animal perceives danger, a system kicks into gear: A chain
reaction of signals releases various hormones -- most
notably epinephrine ("adrenaline"), norepinephrine,
and cortisol -- from the adrenal glands above each kidney.
These hormones boost heart rate, increase respiration,
and increase the availability of glucose (cellular fuel)
in the blood, thereby enabling the famous "fight
or flight" reaction.
Because these responses take a lot of energy, cortisol
simultaneously tells other costly physical processes --
including digestion, reproduction, physical growth, and
some aspects of the immune system -- to shut or slow down.
When occasions to fight or flee are infrequent and threats
pass quickly, the body's stress thermostat adjusts accordingly:
Cortisol levels return to baseline (it takes 40-60 minutes),
the intestines resume digesting food, the sex organs kick
back into gear, and the immune system resumes fighting
infections.
But problems occur when stresses don't let up --or when,
for various reasons, the brain continually perceives stress
even if it isn't really there.
Stress begins with the perception of danger by the brain,
and it appears that continued stress can actually bias
the brain to perceive more danger by altering brain structures
such as those which govern the perception of and response
to threat. Prolonged exposure to cortisol inhibits the
growth of new neurons, and can cause increased growth
of the amygdala, the portion of the brain that controls
fear and other emotional responses.
The end result is heightened expectation of and attention
to threats in the environment. Stress hormones also inhibit
neuron growth in parts of the hippocampus, a brain area
essential in forming new memories. In this way, stress
results in memory impairments and impairs the brain's
ability to put emotional memories in context.
Think of it this way: Too much stress and you forget
not to be stressed out.
These brain changes are thought by some researchers to
be at the heart of the link between stress and depression
-- one of stress's most devastating health consequences
-- as well as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Although when we think of stressors we might think of
big things like abuse, illness, divorce, grieving, or
getting fired, it is now known that the little things
-- traffic, workplace politics, noisy neighbors, a long
line at the bank -- can add up and have a similar impact
on our well-being and our health.
People who report more minor irritants in their lives
also have more mental and physical health problems than
those who encounter fewer hassles. And recent research
shows that PTSD may be the result of stressors adding
up like building blocks, remodeling the plastic brain
in a cumulative rather than a once-and-for-all fashion.
But the best known of stress's health impacts are on
the heart.
The idea that stress directly causes coronary heart disease
has been around since the 1950s; although once controversial,
the direct stress-cardiac link is now well-documented
by many studies. For instance, men who faced chronic stresses
at work or at home ran a 30 percent higher likelihood
of dying over the course of a nine-year study; in another
study, individuals reporting neglect, abuse, or other
stressors in childhood were over three times as likely
as nonstressed individuals to develop heart disease in
adulthood.
Adding insult to injury, stress may even have a selfperpetuating
effect. Depression and heart disease, for example, are
not only the results of stress, but also causes of (more)
stress. Consequently, the chronically stressed body can
appear less like a thermostat than like a wailing speaker
placed too close to a microphone -- a feedback loop in
which the stress response goes out of control, hastening
physical decline with age.
Growing evidence shows that our sensitivity to stress
as adults is already "tuned," so to speak, in
infancy. Specifically, the amount of stress encountered
in early life sensitizes an organism to a certain level
of adversity; high levels of early life stress may result
in hypersensitivity to stress later, as well as to adult
depression.
A history of various stressors such as abuse and neglect
in early life are a common feature of those with chronic
depression in adulthood, for example.
At McGill University in Montreal, Michael J. Meaney and
his colleagues have studied mother and infant rats, using
rat maternal behavior as a model of early life stress
and its later ramifications in humans. The key variable
in the world of rat nurturance is licking and grooming.
Offspring of rat mothers who naturally lick and groom
their pups a lot are less easily startled as adults and
show less fear of novel or threatening situations -- in
other words, less sensitivity to stress -- than offspring
of less nurturant mothers.
The same thing is true of offspring of naturally less
nurturant mothers who are raised (or "cross-fostered")
by more nurturant ones. By the same token, low-licking-and-grooming
rat mothers are themselves more fearful than the more
nurturant rat moms; but again, female offspring of those
non-nurturant mothers foster-parented by nurturant mothers
show less fear and are themselves more nurturant when
they have pups of their own.
This indicates that the connection between maternal nurturance
and stress responsiveness is not simply genetic, but that
fearfulness and nurturance are transmitted from generation
to generation through maternal behavior.
The vicious cycle of stress hormones biasing us to perceive
more threat and react with an increased stress response
might seem like some kind perverse joke played by nature
-- or at least a serious design flaw in the brain. But
it makes better sense if we take the brain out of its
modern, urban, "civilized" context.
The stress response is a necessary response to danger.
For animals, including most likely our hominid ancestors,
behavioral transmission of individual differences in stress
reactivity from parents to offspring makes sense as an
adaptation to fluctuating levels of danger in the environment.
Animals raised in chronically adverse conditions (e.g.,
high conflict, material deprivation) may expect more of
the same in the near future; so in effect, the maternal
treatment of offspring attunes them to the level of stress
they may expect to encounter in their lives. As such,
a response that seems baffling and counterproductive in
a modern, civilized context may make more sense in the
context of our distant evolutionary past.
Even depression has been theorized as playing an adaptive
role in certain contexts.
The inactivity, lack of motivation, loss of interest
in pleasurable activities like sex, and withdrawal from
social relationships experienced by depressed people closely
resemble "sickness behavior" -- the energy-saving
lethargy activated by the immune system in response to
infection.
In a natural setting, the hopeless attitude of depression
may be the most adaptive for an organism infected with
a pathogen: The best strategy for survival is not to expend
energy fruitlessly and become exposed to predators, but
to hunker down, hide from threats, and direct energy to
immune processes where it's needed.
And it turns out that baboons suffer from depression
and other stress-related disorders, just like people do.
According to Stanford neuroendocrinologist Robert Sapolsky,
who has studied stress in baboon troops, it is the relative
safety from predators and high amounts of leisure time
enjoyed by some primates -- including humans -- that has
transformed these useful biological coping mechanisms
into a source of pointless suffering and illness.
Besides heart disease, PTSD, and depression, chronic
stress has been linked to ailments as diverse as intestinal
problems, gum disease, erectile dysfunction, adult-onset
diabetes, growth problems, and even cancer. Chronic rises
in stress hormones have been shown to accelerate the growth
of precancerous cells and tumors; they also lower the
body's resistance to HIV and cancer-causing viruses like
human papilloma virus (the precursor to cervical cancer
in women).
The great challenge in stress psychology -- and the necessary
precursor to developing interventions against stress's
harmful effects -- has been understanding the mechanisms
by which thoughts and feelings and other "mental"
stuff can affect bodily health.
For many years, it was believed that the main causal
link between stress and disease was the immune suppression
that occurs when the body redirects its energy toward
the fight-or-flight response. But recent research has
revealed a far more nuanced picture.
Stress is known to actually enhance one important immune
response, inflammation, and increasingly this is being
seen as the go-between in various stress-related diseases.
Ordinarily, inflammation is how the healthy body deals
with damaged tissue: Cells at the site of infections or
injuries produce signaling chemicals called cytokines,
which in turn attract other immune cells to the site to
help repair it. Cytokines also travel to the brain and
are responsible for initiating sickness behavior. Overactive
cytokine production has been found to put individuals
at greater risk for a variety of aging-related illnesses.
Cytokines may be an important mediator in the relationship
between stress and heart disease. When the arteries feeding
the heart are damaged, cytokines induce more blood flow,
and thus more white blood cells, to the site. White blood
cells accumulate in vessel walls and, over time, become
engorged with cholesterol, becoming plaques; these may
later become destabilized and rupture, causing heart attacks.
Cytokine action also has been implicated in the link
between stress and depression. People suffering from clinical
depression have shown 40--50 percent higher concentrations
of certain inflammatory cytokines. And about 50 percent
of cancer patients whose immune responses are artificially
boosted through the administration of cytokines show depressive
symptoms.
The close connection between inflammation and both depression
and heart disease has led some researchers to theorize
that inflammation may be what mediates the two-way street
between these two conditions: Depression can lead to heart
disease, but heart disease also often leads to depression.
Sleep may be part of this puzzle too, as disturbed sleep,
which often goes with anxiety and depression, increases
levels of proinflammatory cytokines in the body.
Not everyone responds the same way to stress. Personality
traits like negativity, pessimism, and neuroticism are
known to be risk factors for stress-related disease, as
are anger and hostility.
In the late 1950s, Friedman and Rosenman identified a
major link between stress and health with their research
on the "Type A" personality: a person who is
highly competitive, aggressive, and impatient. This personality
was found to be a strong predictor of heart disease, and
later research clarified the picture: The salient factors
in the relationship between the Type A personality and
health are mainly anger, hostility, and a socially dominant
personality style (for example, tending to interrupt other
people while they are talking).
When negative emotions like anger are chronic, it is
as if the body is in a constant state of fight or flight.
There is now evidence that another trait associated with
success-striving in the modern world -- persistence --
may also lead to health problems in some circumstances.
When goals are not readily attainable, the inability to
detach from them may produce frustration, exhaustion,
rumination on failures, and lack of sleep. These in turn
activate harmful inflammatory responses that can lead
to illness and lowered immunity.
Studies also have shown that optimistic people have lower
incidence of heart disease, better prognosis after heart
surgery, and longer life.
The effects of a positive attitude on immunity were shown
in a study by Sheldon Cohen, Carnegie Mellon University,
and his colleagues, in which individuals were exposed
to a cold virus in a laboratory setting and watched over
six days. Those with a positive emotional style were less
likely to develop colds than were individuals with low
levels of positive affect. Positive affect was also found
to be correlated with reduced symptom severity and reduced
pain.
Personality and environmental factors are not the whole
story when it comes to stress.
The next frontier of stress research is the rapidly growing
field of behavioral genetics. Modeling the interaction
of genetic and environmental influences is no longer a
matter of weighing the relative input of nature and nurture.
The two intertwine in subtle and complicated ways, with
environments affecting gene expression, and vice versa,
throughout life. Thus, the current watchword is "stress-diathesis"
models, in which environmental stressors have varying
impact on individuals due to preexisting inherited vulnerabilities.
One major advance in this area was the discovery by Avshalom
Caspi, University of Wisconsin, and his colleagues of
a link between stress sensitivity and a particular gene
called 5HTTLPR. Findings suggest certain genetic makeup
seems to increase the risk for a serious illness through
the mechanism of increased sensitivity to stressful occurrences.
Nathan Fox, University of Maryland, and his colleagues
subsequently reported that children with two short alleles
of the 5HTTLPR gene, whose mothers also reported receiving
low social support, were more likely to show behavioral
inhibition (fearfulness and a tendency to withdraw) at
age 7. Those receiving high support did not show the tendency,
and those with the long alleles but receiving low support
also appeared "protected" by their genetic makeup.
Genetic predisposition to stress sensitivity may in some
cases become a self-fulfilling cycle. Fox and colleagues
found that some very behaviorally inhibited children were
regarded by their mothers as hard to soothe and received
less care and sensitivity as a result; this in turn tuned
up the child's sensitivity to stress. In the model Fox
and colleagues propose, genetically influenced temperament
in early childhood influences the quality of caregiving
children receive, which in turn shapes a child's attention
bias to threat.
But look on the bright side: The newly refined science
of stress could lead to new drug therapies that can control
stress or inhibit its effects on health. Also, depression
and anxiety are not only results of stress, but also causes,
and existing therapeutic and medical treatments for these
conditions can help change how people perceive threats,
put their life challenges in context, and cut stressors
down to manageable size. The cycle doesn't have to be
vicious, in other words.
What's more, the confirmation that the mind directly
affects the body can work as much in our favor as it does
to our detriment, as the personality-and-stress research
above indicates.
As Carol Dweck, Stanford University, has argued, personality
is mutable. In theory, if our outlooks and beliefs about
ourselves can be changed, so can our vulnerability to
life's slings and arrows. Relaxation techniques such as
meditation and yoga, for example, have been confirmed
to quell stress demons.
Even if you are a determined workaholic glued to your
cell phone or a fearful and angry urban neurotic, stress-reduction
methods are readily available to cope with stress in the
short term and even alter perceptions of stressors in
the long term. The bottom line: Stress is not inevitable.
Current Research on Stress:
At the University of Chicago, APS President John Cacioppo
and Louise Hawkley have studied the health effects of
social isolation, an increasingly common malady in the
modern world. Among their findings are that lonely older
adults show more arterial stiffening and higher blood
pressure than their nonlonely counterparts and that the
association between loneliness and blood pressure increases
with age.
In middle-aged and older adults (but not young adults),
loneliness is associated with higher levels of epinephrine
in the blood, and lonely people of all ages show elevated
levels of cortisol. By desensitizing the mechanism whereby
cortisol turns off more cortisol production, the social
isolation frequently experienced by older adults may hasten
physical decline. Lonely individuals of all ages also
have poorer sleep than nonlonely people and therefore
get less of sleep's essential restorative benefits.
Humans and other social animals particularly seek the
company of others when facing threats -- both for safety
and for social support. The general affiliative response
-- what Shelley Taylor, UCLA, has called "tending
and befriending." Oxytocin rises during times of
separation or disrupted social relations. Just as the
familiar "adrenaline rush" of epinephrine induces
the familiar fight-or-flight reaction, it is oxytocin
that causes us to desire company and social togetherness.
It may be especially important in females, reflecting
their different reproductive and survival priorities from
those of males -- i.e., caregiving (tending offspring)
and lessening social tensions through friendly overtures
(befriending).
The full article appears in the December 2007 issue of
the Observer, the monthly magazine of the Association
for Psychological Science.